Isolation of the mitotic spindle matrix and its methods of use

ABSTRACT

The invention encompasses a purified preparation of the mitotic spindle matrix essential for mitotic spindle assembly, which allows for identifying an agent that modulates a cell division and/or differentiation signaling pathway comprising determining the effect of the agent on spindle formation, MT nucleation, or lamin matrix assembly wherein the change in spindle formation, MT nucleation or lamin matrix assembly.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Applications 60/735,168 (filed Nov. 10, 2005), 60/781,738 (filed Mar. 14, 2006) and 60/794,099 (filed Apr. 24, 2006), all of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF FEDERAL SUPPORT

This present invention arose in part from research funded by federal grant from the National Institutes of Health, Grant No. 5R01GM56312.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to the identification and isolation of a mitotic spindle matrix, which allows the assay and identification of cell division and cell differentiation signaling pathways.

BACKGROUND

1. Cell Division in Development, Adult Tissue Homeostasis, and Disease

Metazoan cell division involves dramatic changes of cellular structures. Both secretion and endocytosis are either greatly slowed down or stopped as the cell prepares for mitosis [1-3]. As mitotic spindle assembly progresses and chromosomes further condense [4], the dissolution of nuclear envelope and nuclear lamina [5] is accompanied by the fragmentation of Golgi ribbons [6] and changes in other membrane compartments including the endoplasmic reticulum [7], the endosomes [3], and the mitochondria [8]. Therefore, successful mitosis requires not only an equal segregation of chromosomes into daughter cells but also proper partitioning of other cellular components such as the membrane systems.

Proper cell division is fundamentally important in normal development and tissue homeostasis. For example, equal chromosome segregation during cell division is required for maintaining genome stability [4]. Correct segregation of nuclear materials, including transcription factors, is essential for the daughter cells to reestablish the interphase nuclei with appropriate transcription programs that allow them to either progress along an appropriate differentiation pathway or to remain undifferentiated (as in the case of division of progenitor and stem cells) [9]. Moreover, proper partitioning of the membrane system is necessary to ensure that each of the daughter cells can reestablish both endocytic and exocytic pathways that allow them to send and receive signals and to coordinate organogenesis and tissue homeostasis [10].

Inappropriate cell division could lead to defects in development and adult tissue homeostasis, which results in disease. Indeed, many human diseases, including cancer, premature aging, disease of the vasculature and the airway, and diabetes, are directly related to problems in cell division, differentiation, and cell death. For example, cancer is a result of uncontrolled cell division. Premature aging such as certain types of laminopathy is largely caused by lack of cell proliferation. Increased proliferation and decreased apoptosis of smooth muscle cells contribute toward airway obstruction in asthma, atheroma and restenosis after vascular injury.

2. The Role of Mitotic Spindle Morphogenesis in Cell Division and Differentiation

The assembly of the microtubule (MT)-based bipolar spindle apparatus is essential for cell division. One of the important functions of the spindle apparatus is to capture the condensed chromosomes on the MT-based spindle fibers. Equal chromosome segregation requires that each sister chromatids to be captured by spindle fibers originated from opposite spindle poles. An elaborate surveillance system called spindle checkpoint has evolved to monitor the capture of chromosomes by the spindle fibers. The spindle checkpoint senses inappropriate chromosome capture and is able to arrest mitosis until all chromosomes have achieved correct attachment to the spindle.

Another important function of the spindle apparatus is to regulate cell differentiation during development. The position and geometry of mitotic spindle can determine the plane of cell division. Studies in multiple systems have shown that cell-cell signaling regulates spindle positioning and spindle shape. The mitotic spindle in turn functions to differentially partition cell fate determinants into daughter cells. Through differential interaction with the membrane systems, the mitotic spindle also actively segregate signaling molecules into one but not the other daughter cells [11].

3. The Mitotic Spindle as a Target of Therapeutic Interventions and Its Current Limitations

The importance of spindle morphogenesis in maintaining genome stability and in ensuring proper cell differentiation makes it an ideal target for therapeutic interventions of many diseases. For example, chemicals such as taxol that disrupts proper MT polymerization have been developed to treat cancer [12]. Additional chemicals that disrupt either MT-based motor proteins [12] or kinases that regulate cell division, such as CDK kinases [13], Polo-like kinase 1 [14], and Aurora A and B kinases [15] are at different stages of development or clinical trials. Extensive studies have shown that many of these chemicals can cause prolonged cell division block and initial tumors regression. However, a number of outcomes of such treatments eventually render additional genomic instability and tumor re-growth as some tumor cells escape the prolonged mitotic arrests, survive and continue to undergo cell cycle [16]. The limited success of anti-cancer drugs calls for the development of additional chemicals that can both arrest tumor cell division and cause cell death. However, the current understanding of spindle morphogenesis has put a significant constraint on the development of assay systems to identify such kind chemicals.

Differentiation of stem cells into different tissues holds great promise in the treatment of various human diseases. The ability of mitotic spindle to orchestrate differential partitioning of cell fate determinants offers a great potential to identify compounds that could induce lineage specific tissue differentiation from stem cells cultured in vitro. However, the lack of understanding of how the mitotic spindle interacts with cell fate determinants has made it difficult to design strategies to identify such compounds.

4. The Identification of Mitotic Spindle Matrix Presents a Conceptual Advancement of Understanding the Role of Spindle Morphogenesis in Cell Division and Cell Differentiation

Mitotic spindle assembly and chromosome segregation is a dynamic and force production process, which requires coordinated actions of MTs, MT-based motors, MT-binding proteins, and chromosomes [17, 18]. Although much progress has been made in understanding how the MT-based spindle regulates chromosomes segregation, it has become apparent that proper spindle morphogenesis and cell division involves additional intracellular structures besides the MT cytoskeleton. Indeed, it was hypothesized decades ago that a static scaffold, called the spindle matrix, exists during mitosis and is required for cell division. Such a matrix could tether spindle assembly factors (SAF) to support the assembly and force production of spindle microtubules [19-21]. However, the existence and molecular nature of the spindle matrix had remained elusive until our recent discoveries, which are disclosed in this invention.

Previous studies have shown that the guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) Ran, a protein with well-established function in interphase nuclear trafficking, plays an important role in regulating spindle morphogenesis in mitosis [22-29]. Moreover, it was determined that RanGTP functions in a signaling pathway that leads to the activation of the mitotic kinase Aurora A [30, 31]. Based on these findings, a number of assays have been devised that allowed identification, biochemical isolation and characterization of the mitotic spindle matrix [32, 33].

As disclosed in this invention, it was determined that RanGTP induces the assembly of the mitotic spindle matrix, which is essential for spindle morphogenesis [33]. It was demonstrated demonstrated that the mitotic spindle matrix associates with spindle microtubules and consists of a membrane system and the polymerized nuclear lamin B. Moreover, this matrix tethers a number of spindle assembly factors that are known to promote both microtubule nucleation and organization. Finally, the mitotic spindle matrix contains transcription factors and signaling molecules known to regulate cell proliferation, stem cell pluripotency, and cell differentiation. These discoveries provide an important conceptual advancement that explains how mitotic spindle morphogenesis is required for not only chromosome segregation but also for the partitioning of cell fate determines and membrane systems into daughter cells. Therefore, the mitotic spindle matrix identified in this invention differs significantly both in its functions and contents from the originally hypothesized spindle matrix. The mitotic spindle matrix is also distinct from the interphase nuclear lamina in its structure, composition, function, and the requirement of the mitotic state for its assembly.

5. The Ability to Prepare and Isolate the Mitotic Spindle Matrix Offers Distinct Approaches to Assay for Cell Division and Differentiation

The characteristics of the mitotic spindle matrix disclosed in this invention allow us to devise methods (also disclosed in this invention) to prepare and isolate the mitotic spindle matrix. These methods are conceptually and practically distinct from the existing methods of isolating mitotic spindles. The existing spindle-isolation methods involve the removal of DNA and RNA and the utilization of detergents [34], which prevent the isolation of a fully functional mitotic spindle matrix. By modulating the mitotic spindle matrix, our invention offers distinct strategies to manipulate cell division and differentiation potentials that are not currently available.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The invention discloses the identification and isolation of a mitotic spindle matrix that are essential for microtubule nucleation and spindle assembly. It encompasses a method for identifying an agent that modulates a cell division and/or differentiation signaling pathway comprising contacting a plurality of beads or dots, each of said plurality of beads or dots comprising at least one protein with a biological sample in the presence or absence of said agent; and determining the effect on spindle formation, MT nucleation, or lamin/membrane containing matrix assembly wherein the change in spindle formation, MT nucleation or lamin/membrane containing matrix assembly compared to a control indicates an agent capable of modulating a cell division and/or differentiation signaling pathway.

In some embodiments, the cell division and/or differentiation signaling pathway is selected from the group consisting of a GTPase protein signaling pathway, a kinase signaling pathway, an ubiquitin signaling pathway, an apoptosis and capsase signaling pathway. GTPase protein signaling pathways are selected from the group consisting of Ran, Rab, Ras, Rho, Cdc, and Rac while kinase protein signaling pathways are selected from the group consisting of Aurora A and B.

In some embodiments, the biological sample is a cell line, or cell lysate or extract and the cells are HeLa cells, NIH3T3 cells or murine embryonic stem cells while the extract is a Xenopus egg extract or Drosophila embryo egg extracts. In some embodiments, the beads or dots comprise antibodies which bind to the protein involved in the cell division and/or differentiation signaling pathway. In some embodiments, the protein is a kinase protein, including a wild-type kinase protein such as, but not limited to, Aurora A.

In some embodiments, the control is a negative control which does not comprise the agent and/or comprises a mutant kinase with one or more amino acid substitutions or deletions. In other embodiments, the control is a positive control which comprises an inhibitor of MT nucleation, spindle formation or lamin/membrane matrix formation. The invention includes methods which further comprise determining the effect of the agent on post-translational modification of one or more proteins and/or translation of one or more proteins.

In other embodiments, the methods of the invention further comprise determining the interaction of a lamin B/membrane matrix with a cellular component selected from the group consisting of: one or more RNA molecules, transcription factors, mitochondria, and membrane components.

In yet other embodiments, the test agent is selected from the group consisting of a protein, chemical compound, an antibody, a ribozyme, a nucleic acid, a polypeptide, an antisense nucleic acid molecule, and an interfering RNA (RNAi) molecule. Proteins include, but are not limited to, Spindle Assembly Factors, filament proteins, and kinesins. In some embodiments, the beads are magnetic beads and the dots are quantum dots.

The invention includes any agents identified by the above methods of the invention. The invention also includes a method of treating a proliferative or aging disease in a subject in need of such treatment comprising administering a therapeutically effective amount of a pharmaceutical composition comprising the identified agent.

In some embodiments the proliferative disease is selected from the group consisting of cancer and blood vessel proliferative disorders. Types of cancer include, but are not limited to, squamous cell carcinoma, astrocytoma, Kaposi's sarcoma, glioblastoma, multiple myeloma, lung cancer, bladder cancer, head and neck cancer, melanoma, ovarian cancer, prostate cancer, breast cancer, small-cell lung cancer, glioma, colorectal cancer, genitourinary cancer, gastrointestinal cancer. Types of blood vessel proliferative disorders include, but are not limited to, diabetic retinopathy, age-related macular degeneration, retinopathy of prematurity, arthritis and restenosis. In some embodiments, the aging disease is laminopathy or progeria.

The invention also encompasses a kit for identifying an agent that modulates spindle formation, microtubule (MT) nucleation or lamin/membrane assembly comprising a plurality of beads or dots, each of said plurality of beads or dots comprising a protein involved in a cell division and/or differentiation and signaling pathway, and at least one antibody to said protein. In some embodiments, they are selected from the group consisting of porous beads, nonporous beads and magnetic beads. In other embodiments, the dots are quantum dots.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF FIGURES AND TABLE

FIG. 1: Requirement of RanGTP for assembly of LB3-matrices. (FIG. 1A) Association of LB3-matrices with AurA-beads in the presence of RanGTP. MT assembly was induced with AurA-beads and RanGTP or AurA-beads and DMSO, and MTs were subsequently depolymerized with nocodazole. The percentages of AurA-beads that were associated with MTs (red) or LB3 matrix (green) under different conditions were quantified. (FIGS. 1B and C) Requirement of RanGTP but not MT polymerization for assembly of LB3-matrices around AurA-beads (1B) or sperm chromatin (1C). AurA-beads (1B) were incubated with egg extracts with or without RanGTP in the presence or absence of nocodazole. Images show AurA-beads (red) and LB3-matrix (green). Results were quantified as above. Sperm chromatin (1C) was incubated with M-phase egg extracts in the presence or absence of nocodazole or RanT24N for 5 min. MT (red), LB3 (green), and chromatin (blue). (FIG. 1D) Association of LB3-matrices with spindle MTs. Spindle assembly was induced with AurA-beads and RanGTP. The presence of MTs, LB3 or TPX2 was examined at the indicated time after nocodazole addition. Scales: white bar, 10 μm; magnetic beads, 2.8 μm.

FIG. 2: The fibrillar-granular LB3-matrices contain lipids and are completely disrupted by 0.1% Triton X100. (2A) Matrices associated with sperm chromatin or AurA-beads were enlarged to show the details of the fibrillar-granular LB3-matrices (green) associated with sperm chromatin (blue) or AurA-beads (red). (2B) Detection of lipids on spindles assembled with AurA-beads and RanGTP. Lipid, MTs, and LB3 were labeled with CM-Dil (green), tubulin (red), and LB3 (blue) antibodies. The images are pseudo colored. (2C) Detection of lipids on LB3 matrices. (2D) Disruption of LB3-matrices by Triton X100. Scales: white bar, 10 μm; magnetic beads, 2.8 μm.

FIG. 3: Effects of importin alpha and beta on LB3-matrices that contain SAFs. (3A) Binding of the nuclear localization signal (NLS) in the C-terminus of LB3 to importin alpha. LB3T and LB3T(−)nls were expressed and purified as S-tagged (a 15-meric peptide from ribonuclease S-protein) fusion proteins. SDS-PAGE and Coomassie blue staining showed that LB3T, but not LB3T(−)nls, was associated with importin alpha. (3B) Sensitivity of the interaction between LB3 and importin alpha and □eta in the egg extract to RanGTP. Control IgG or LB3-IgG was used to immunoprecipitate proteins from egg extract in the presence or absence of RanGTP. More importin alpha and □eta were co-immunoprecipitated with LB3 in the absence of RanGTP than in the presence of RanGTP. (C) Disruption of matrices by importin alpha and □eta. Spindle assembly was induced with AurA-beads and RanGTP. The reaction was diluted 100-fold in XB containing nocodazole and purified importins alpha and □eta (2 μM each) or nocodazole and purified RanGTP (5 μM) with importins alpha and □eta (2 μM each). The graph on the right shows quantification of beads associated with LB3-matrices under these conditions. Similar percentages were observed for matrices containing SAFs. Scale, (magnetic beads), 2.8 μm.

FIG. 4: Disruption of mitotic spindle and matrix assembly by elevating RanGTP-importin beta concentrations leads to mitotic cell death. (4A) Reduction of RanBP1 by siRNA. Decreasing amount of cell lysates (10, 5, 2.5, 0.5, 0.25 μl) were loaded. Western blotting revealed that RanBP1 siRNA reduced RanBP1 protein level without affecting the levels of tubulin. Estimated RanBP1 reduction is 75-90%. (4B) Reduction of RanBP1 disrupts chromosomal RanGTP-importin beta concentration gradient and leads to an overall increase of RanGTP-importin beta concentration throughout the mitotic cytosol. RanGTP-importin beta was detected using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). Control or RanBP1 siRNA were transfected into HeLa cells expressing YIC FRET sensor and histone H2B-cherry variant of GFP. Cells were imaged live to detect YIC and condensed chromosomes. FRET was carried by photobleaching YFP in the cell and imaging the enhanced CFP fluorescence (color code ranging from blue to red with red indicates the highest FRET). (4C) RanBP1 reduction disrupts spindle assembly. siRNA-treated cells were stained by DAPI (blue) and tubulin antibody (green). Prometaphase cells with either normal or defective (many small MT asters) MT structures are shown. Shown are cells with defective MT structures that exhibit either no or extensive membrane blebs. Quantifications of the phenotypes are on the right. (4D) RanBP1 reduction causes mitotic cell death. HeLa cells expressing histone H2B-GFP were treated with either control or RanBP1 siRNA for 18 hours and then recorded by time-lapse microscopy for 18 hours. Shown are phase contrast and the corresponding fluorescence images at the indicated time frames (hr:min:sec). Percentages of cells that divided, died in mitosis, died in cytokinesis, or died in interphase were quantified (graph at right). Error bars in all the histograms represent standard deviation from at least three independent experiments. More than 100 mitotic cells were counted in each of the experiments. Scale bars, 10 μm.

FIG. 5: Effects of increasing concentrations of Sox2 or Oct4 on the assembly of mitotic spindle and spindle matrix. Purified glutathione S-transferase (GST), GST-Sox2, or GST-Oct4 fusion proteins were added at 200-500 nM final concentrations in Xenopus egg extracts. AurA-beads and RanGTP were used to induce the assembly of the mitotic spindle matrix (shown in 5A as green lamin B3 staining) or mitotic spindle (shown in 5B as red rhodamine label of microtubules). As compared to GST control, addition of either GST-Sox2 or GST-Oct4 significantly slowed down the assembly of both the mitotic spindle and spindle matrix. The images shown are at an early time point when the GST control reactions had assembled spindles and spindle matrix, while reactions containing GST-Sox2 or GST-Oct4 had only assembled microtubule asters and no spindle matrix. This slowed assembly of spindle and spindle matrix was not observed when equal concentrations of GST-Sox2 and GST-Oct4 were added together. Scale bar, magnetic beads, 2.8 μm.

FIG. 6: Effects of mutant LB3 proteins to disrupt mitotic spindles and LB3-matrices. (6A) Purified LB3 and mutant LB3 proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Coomassie blue staining. (6B) Effects of mutant LB3 to disrupt spindle assembly induced by Xenopus sperm chromatin. Examples of normal and defective spindles or MT asters are shown. The graph shows the quantification of different MT structures under the indicated conditions. (6C) Effects of mutant LB3 proteins to disrupt spindle assembly induced by AurA-beads and RanGTP. Examples of normal and defective spindles as well as MT asters are shown. The graph at the bottom shows the quantification of different MT structures under the indicated conditions. (6D) Effects of mutant LB3 proteins to disrupt the assembly of LB3-matrices around AurA-beads. Spindle assembly was induced with AurA-beads plus RanGTP in the presence of buffer, wild-type, or mutant LB3. MTs were depolymerized and LB3-matrices were detected using LB3 antibody. Examples of beads with associated LB3-matrices are shown. The graph on the right shows the quantification of AurA-beads associated with LB3-matrices under the indicated conditions. Scales: white bar, 10 μm; magnetic beads, 2.8 μm.

FIG. 7: AurA-beads nucleate microtubule asters and significantly speed up spindle assembly as compared to XMAP215-beads. AurA-beads or XMAP215-beads were added to M-phase egg extracts in the presence of RanGTP. Microtubule structures were assayed from 2 min 30 sec to 30 min after the initiation of incubation at room temperature. Examples of asters and spindles are shown (top panels). Quantification (bottom graph) shows the number of asters and spindles in 50 random fields. Spindles began to assemble in the presence of AurA-beads 2 min and 30 sec after incubation and reached the highest number of spindles by 12 min and 30 sec. However, in the presence of XMAP215, spindles began to appear by ˜17 min. The images are scaled differently to accommodate the MT structures. The magnetic beads (2.8 μm) in each images serve as scale bars.

FIG. 8: Requirement of Lamin B for proper spindle assembly and function in mitosis. (8A) Immunoblotting to detect LB1, LB2, or tubulin in HeLa cells treated with control or LB siRNAs. (8B) Quantification of spindle defects in control or LB siRNA-treated cells. At least 100 mitotic cells were analyzed for each siRNA-treatment. Shown are representative quantifications of at least 6 independent experiments with two different siRNA sequences. (8C) Examples of normal and defective spindles (unfocused spindle poles or abnormal spindle lacking chromosome congression) in (8B) stained with antibodies to γ-tubulin (green) and α-tubulin (red). Defective spindles are from HeLa cells treated with LB siRNAs. (8D) Effect of depletion of LB on the timing of chromosome alignment and segregation. Control or LB siRNA-treated HeLa cells were imaged. The elapsed time from chromosome congression (the appearance of chromosomal bar) to chromosome separation in 50 to 100 mitotic cells was analyzed for each siRNA treatment. (8E) Immunodepletion and add-back of LB3. Rabbit polyclonal or mouse monoclonal antibody to LB3 were used for immunodepletion. 6His-LB3 was added back to the LB3-depleted egg extracts to a final concentration of 0.2 μM. Rabbit or mouse non-immunized IgG was used as controls. (8F) Quantification of MT structures in 50 random fields. (8G) Examples of different MT structures (red) immunostained with Eg5 antibodies (green). DNA was stained with DAPI (blue). The defective spindle, aster or half spindle shown is from LB3-depleted egg extracts. Scale bars, 10 μm.

FIG. 9: Induction of mitotic spindle matrix assembly by RanGTP and AurA-beads in mouse ES cells. Mouse ES cells were arrested in mitosis using nocodazole. 70-90% mitotic arrest can be achieved after about 12 hours of nocodazole (400 nM) treatment. The ES cells were washed in PBS and the cell pellet was snap frozen in liquid nitrogen. To make the cell lysate, an energy mix, which contains 0.5 mg/ml delta 90 cyclin B, 10 mM ATP, 100 mM creatine phosphate, 0.5 mg/ml creatine kinase, that equals to 5% of the volume of the ES cell pellet was used to resuspend the ES cell pellet. A ˜2-second sonication was used to disrupt the cell followed by centrifugation to make clarified and concentrated ES cell lysates. RanGTP and AurA-beads were added to the lysate to induce the assembly of mitotic spindle matrix. Shown are matrices that were double labeled with tubulin and lamin B, Sox2, or nanog. AurA-beads (2.8 μm) embedded in the matrices serve as reference for the scale.

FIG. 10: Localization of AurA to MT structures assembled in Xenopus M-phase egg extracts in the presence of RanGTP. (10A) Bacterially expressed and purified Xenopus His-AurA was visualized either by Coomassie blue staining (CB) or by Western blotting (WB) probed with the affinity-purified rabbit polyclonal antibody to the AurA protein. (10B) The rabbit antibody recognized a single band with the expected size for AurA in Xenopus egg extracts by Western blotting (WB). The antibody also immunoprecipitated AurA from the egg extract as judged by Western blotting probed with the monoclonal antibody (1C1) to AurA (IP/WB). (10C) M-phase egg extracts containing rhodamine tubulin were stimulated by RanQ69L, a mutant Ran mimicking RanGTP, to assemble MT asters and spindles in the presence of control buffer (control), 60 ng/ml control rabbit IgG, control secondary antibody for immunofluoresence staining (control 2° IgG), or AurA antibody (AurA IgG). MT structures were processed for immunofluorescence staining for AurA. The presence of AurA antibody during spindle assembly allowed the detection of AurA on MTs. Insets show a microtubule aster with the AurA antibody labeling the astral center. Scale bar, 10 μm. (10D) AurA antibody did not inhibit aster and spindle assembly stimulated by RanGTP. The number of MT asters and spindles was quantified from reactions shown in (10C) in 50 random fields using a 60× objective. Representative results from one of at least three independent experiments are shown.

FIG. 11: AurA kinase activation by TPX2 is essential for spindle assembly stimulated by RanGTP. (11A) AurA activation by TPX2. TPX2 was depleted from M-phase egg extracts (−TPX2) followed by RanGTP stimulation with or without supplementing the extracts with purified TPX2 or ΔNTPX2. The activation of AurA was determined using a previously described antibody (p-AurA), which recognizes phospho-T295 in the activation loop of AurA. Total AurA was detected using the AurA antibody raised against His-AurA (AurA). (11B) AurA activation and spindle assembly. MT structures assembled in experiments described in (11A) were examined. Depleting TPX2 blocked the assembly of both MT asters and spindles. While TPX2 add-back rescued the formation of both spindles and asters in the depleted extracts, ΔNTPX2 add-back only rescued the formation of asters. Moreover, only TPX2 add-back restored the localization of AurA to the centers of asters. Scale bar, 10 μm. (11C) Quantification of asters and spindles in 50 random fields of the reactions in (11B). Representative results from one of at least three independent experiments are shown.

FIG. 12: The N-terminal region of TPX2 is required for spindle assembly induced by sperm chromatin in M-phase egg extracts. To determine whether TPX2 or the N-terminus of TPX2 is essential for spindle assembly, the egg extracts were immunodepleted using either TPX2 antibody (TPX2 depletion) or control IgG (control). Purified TPX2 or ΔNTPX2 was added back to the TPX2-depleted-egg extracts to the equivalent concentration (100%) of the endogenous TPX2. Different ratios of TPX2 and ΔNTPX2 added are shown (% of endogenous TPX2) below the graph on the right. Examples of good spindle, bad spindle, and half spindles are shown on the left. The spindle microtubules were visualized using rhodamine tubulin (red), while spindle poles were visualized by immunostaining with anti-Eg5 antibodies (green). Sperm chromatin was stained by DAPI (blue). It was determined that depleting TPX2 completely inhibited spindle assembly. A few microtubule structures formed in the absence of TPX2 were half spindles that had either focused or unfocused poles. Addition of purified TPX2 rescued spindle assembly to the level of control-depleted egg extracts. However, ΔNTPX2 add-back only rescued spindle assembly to ˜2% of the control level. ΔNTPX2 add-back did rescue the assembly of half spindles with focused poles. Compared to mock-depletion or TPX2-depletion/TPX2 add-back, ΔNTPX2 add-back also caused an increased assembly of bad spindles and half spindle assembly that had unfocused poles. Scale bar, 10 μm.

FIG. 13: AurA-coated beads act as MTOCs in M-phase egg extracts stimulated by RanGTP. (13A) Localization of AurA antibody-coated beads to MT astral centers and spindle poles assembled in the presence of RanGTP in M-phase egg extracts. All scale bars here and below are 10 μm. (13B) The kinase activity of AurA is essential for AurA-beads to function as MTOCs. AurA-beads made by coating the AurA antibody-bound beads with either purified AurA protein or with AurA from egg extracts gave indistinguishable results. The images shown for AurA and AurA-AA (kinase-dead AurA) are from beads coated with purified AurA proteins. (13C) AurA-beads did not nucleate microtubules from purified tubulin, while XMAP215-coated-beads did. MT assembly was detected using rhodamine-labeled tubulin. MT nucleation was carried out at the indicated tubulin concentrations at 37° C. for 20 min. (13D) RanGTP stimulated the stable recruitment of microtubule-nucleating activities onto AurA-beads. AurA-beads were incubated with M-phase egg extracts under the three conditions shown. AurA-beads stimulated both aster and spindle assembly in the presence (condition 2), but not in the absence (condition 1), of RanGTP. As expected, AurA-beads incubated in the presence of RanGTP and nocodazole did not assemble MTs (condition 3). AurA-beads from conditions 1 and 3 were retrieved by magnet and washed with XB buffer. MT nucleation was carried out by incubating the beads with 20 μM pure tubulin at 30° C. for 20 min. Only AurA-beads incubated with egg extracts in the presence of RanGTP nucleated MT asters. The diameter of the beads is 2.8 μm.

FIG. 14: AurA-beads stimulate spindle assembly in the M-phase egg extracts in the presence of RanGTP. (14A) AurA-beads stimulate aster and spindle assembly. M-phase egg extracts containing beads coated with control IgG (control), AurA, AurA-AA, or XMAP215 were stimulated by RanGTP for 10 min. MT structures and beads are shown. (14B) Quantification of aster and spindle assembly. Both AurA-beads and XMAP215-beads stimulated aster assembly within 10 min, but only AurA-beads assembled spindles at this time point. Significantly fewer asters were assembled in extracts containing either control IgG-beads or AurA-AA-beads. MT asters or spindles that were either associated or not associated with beads were counted. Representative results from one of at least three independent experiments are shown. (14C) Localization of AurA-beads and XMAP215-beads on spindles. Both AurA- and XMAP215-beads were localized to the center of microtubules asters (14A). However, while AurA-beads were found at spindle poles, XMAP215-beads were localized along the spindle. Neither control IgG-beads nor AurA-AA-beads showed specific localization to the microtubule structures. (14D) Quantification of bead localization along spindles. Each spindle was divided into a, b, and c areas as shown. The percentage of beads with localization in these areas was quantified. Representative results from one of at least three independent experiments are shown. (14E) Quantification of bead number per aster or per spindle. Asters with either no bead or one bead per astral center were quantified. Spindles with one bead at only one of the two poles (one bead) or one bead at each of the two poles (two beads) were quantified. Representative results from one of a minimum of three independent experiments are shown.

FIG. 15: The MTOC function of AurA-coated beads depends on both MT nucleators and MT-based motors. (15A) Immunodepletion of TPX2 or γ-tubulin from the M-phase egg extracts. Controls were immunodepletions carried out with non-immunized rabbit IgG. (15B) Immunodepletion of either TPX2 or γ-tubulin significantly affected the ability of AurA-beads and XMAP215-beads to nucleate MT in the presence of RanGTP. Scale bars here and below are 10 μm. (15C) Quantification of beads that were not associated with MTs. Immunodepletion of either TPX2 or γ-tubulin increased the number of MT-free AurA- or XMAP215-beads. This effect was more pronounced on the AurA-beads than on the XMAP215-beads. Representative results from one of at least three independent experiments are shown. (15D) Inhibition of Eg5 or dynein using Monastrol or 70.1 antibody, respectively, completely disrupted spindle assembly in extracts containing AurA-beads. MT-free beads were quantified. Monastrol (MA), but not 70.1 antibody, significantly increased the percentage of MT-free AurA-beads. Neither Monastrol nor 70.1 antibody greatly affected the ability of XMAP215-beads to nucleate MT asters. Representative results from one of at least three independent experiments are shown.

FIG. 16: Requirement of LB3 for the assembly of LB3-matrices that contain SAFs. (16A) Similarity of LB3-matrices and SAF-matrices. Spindle assembly was induced with AurA-beads and RanGTP. After MT depolymerization, the remaining structures were immunostained with antibodies to LB3, PAR, NuMA, Eg5, XMAP215, or TPX2. Rhodamine tubulin was used to label MTs. (16B) Quantification of LB3- or SAF-matrices in 50 random fields from (16A) that were associated with 0, 1, 2, or more than 2 beads. (16C) Presence of SAF in LB3-matrices. LB3-matrices were assembled with AurA-beads and RanGTP in the absence of MT assembly and double immunostained for SAFs (XMAP215, Eg5, or NuMA in green) and LB3 (red). The graph shows the quantification of LB3, NuMA, PAR, XMAP215, Eg5, and TPX2 positive matrices associated with 0, 1, 2, or more than 2 AurA-beads in 50 random fields. (16D) Requirement of LB3 for the assembly of matrices containing Eg5 and NuMA. Egg extracts were first immunodepleted of LB3, Eg5, or XMAP215 with their respective antibodies and then incubated with sperm chromatin. After depolymerization of MTs, the sperm chromatin was stained with DAPI (blue) and antibodies to LB3, Eg5, or NuMA (green). Rhodamine-tubulin was used to label MTs (red). The percentage of sperm chromatin with associated matrices that contain LB3, Eg5, or NuMA were quantified. When either Eg5 or XMAP215 was depleted from the egg extracts, associations of NuMA, Eg5 (XMAP215 depletion), or LB3 with sperm chromatin as matrices were similar. However, when LB3 was depleted, neither LB3 nor NuMA and Eg5 associated with sperm chromatin as matrices. Shown is a typical graph quantifying the association of LB3-matrix with sperm chromatin. Scales: white bars, 10 μm; magnetic beads, 2.8 μm.

FIG. 17: Isolated LB3-matrices nucleate MT assembly. (17A) Isolation of LB3-matrix. AurA-beads and RanGTP were used to induce spindle assembly in egg extracts (a). Spindles were separated from the egg extracts either by centrifugation through a glycerol cushion onto coverslips (b) or retrieved with a magnet (c). The magnet-retrieved spindles were washed with buffer containing nocodazole. LB3-matrices were retained on the beads (d). To separate the LB3-matrices from the beads, the sample was pipetted repeatedly. Beads (e) were then retrieved with a magnet, leaving LB3-matrices (f) in the supernatant. Scale bar, 10 μm. (17B) Commassie blue staining of the samples described in (17A). 1 μl of egg extracts, or the equivalent of 5, 30, 120, 600, or 600 μl of extract was loaded in lanes a, b, c, d, e, or f, respectively. (17C) Western blotting of the samples in (A) with antibody to PAR. Similar amounts of materials were loaded as in (17B), except in lanes e and f where only the equivalent of 120 μl of the extracts was loaded in each lane. (17D) Western blotting of the samples in (17B) with antibody to tubulin, TPX2, Eg5, XMAP215, or LB3. (17E) Isolation of LB3-matrices from mock-depleted or XMAP215-depleted egg extracts. Top, isolated LB3-matrices (green) with little tubulin (red). Bottom, isolated LB3-matrices (green) from the XMAP215-depleted egg extracts without XMAP215 (red). Scale bars, 5 μm. (17F) MT assembly induced by isolated LB3-matrices. The LB3-matrices isolated as described in (17E) were used in MT assembly assays using pure tubulin. LB3-matrices, green; MTs, red. The graph at the bottom shows the quantification of matrices that nucleated MTs. Scale bar, 10 μm.

Table 1: This table lists the proteins that were found to associate with the isolated mitotic spindle matrix using mass spectrometry. The mitotic spindle matrix was isolated from Xenopus laevis egg extracts. The table lists the accession numbers for each protein in Xenopus laevis, Xenopus tropocalis, or its homolog in organisms that has gene annotations.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Preparation and Isolation of Mitotic Spindle Matrix

The present invention discloses the identification and isolation of the mitotic spindle matrix utilizing concentrated lysates made from eggs, embryos, or tissue culture cells, including embryonic or adult stem cells. The membranous-lamin-based mitotic spindle matrix is essential for cell division and cell differentiation. It can be used to assay for agents that modulate the potential of cell division and/or cell differentiation. In one embodiment, Aurora A kinase can be used to isolate and prepare the mitotic spindle matrix. In this embodiment, Aurora A kinase is coated onto magnetic beads and added to the lysates in the presence of RanGTP. The beads are retrieved using magnet and washed. These beads are associated with a membranous-lamin-based assemblage. In another embodiment, biotinylated chromatin can be used to isolate the same matrix. Since chromatin can generate RanGTP, it is possible to omit the exogenously added RanGTP in this embodiment. In a further embodiment, RanGTP can be increased by either down-regulating the RanGTPase (RanGAP) activity or by up-regulating the activity of guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) for Ran.

The Biochemical Properties of the Mitotic Spindle Matrix

The mitotic spindle matrix can assembly either in the presence or absence of microtubules, but it requires the signaling pathways such as those mediated by the RanGTPase (FIG. 1A). If microtubules are allowed to polymerize, a much more robust mitotic spindle matrix can be assembled (FIGS. 1B and C). The matrix assembly is completely inhibited by detergent (FIG. 2) and nuclear transport receptors (FIG. 3), which in turn inhibits spindle assembly and cell division. It was determined that a component of the mitotic spindle matrix has at least one of the following roles: spindle assembly, microtubule nucleation, chromosome segregation, regulating the timing of spindle assembly and mitotic progression, cell differentiation, or apoptosis. Therefore, the mitotic spindle matrix not only orchestrates cell division but also directs the organization and fates of daughter cells.

Disclosed herein is that this mitotic spindle matrix contains an assembled form of lamin, membranes, actin, spindle assembly factors (Eg5, XCTK2, XMAP215, NuMA, PAR, Survivin, Aurora B, INCENP), transcription factors (Sox family and Oct family of transcription factors, Brachyury-like T-box transcription factor, Myb, and Myc), chromatin remodeling complexes (Brg complex), components of the endocytic pathway (clathrin and eps15), components of the ubiquitination system (FAM and p97-Ufd1-Npl4), components of the translational machinery, etc (see Table 1). A large number of these components are essential for spindle morphogenesis and chromosome segregation and they further determine the kinetics of cell division and the cell fates after cell division.

The Utility of the Mitotic Spindle Matrix

Identification of agents that have therapeutic values for human disease requires powerful biochemical assays that mimic the in vivo cellular processes. Most current assays are overly simplified, therefore limiting the scope and utility of agents that are identified. The present invention provides an advancement that overcomes the current limitations of drug identification process. Examples of three utilities of the mitotic spindle matrix in drug discovery are described below.

a. Identification of Agents That Arrest Cancer Cells and Induce Their Death.

Most current screens used to identify anti-cancer drugs are based on assays for microtubule assembly or activities of known spindle assembly factors. Although chemicals that inhibit cancer cell proliferation have been discovered and some of them, such as taxol, are useful in cancer chemotherapy, the major limitation of these agents is that they inhibit cancer cell division by arresting them in mitosis. Prolonged mitotic arrest can eventually lead to cell death of many tumor cells. However, subpopulations of tumor cells do overcome the arrest. A fraction of these cells acquire and accumulate new mutations that allow them to proliferate aggressively and become insensitive to the drug treatment, which has been the major limitation of currently available cancer chemotherapy. Much more effective agents for cancer therapy would be those that simultaneously arrest cells in mitosis and induce their death without prolonged cell cycle arrests. However, despite extensive effort, no such chemicals have been identified because most strategies used in screening anti-cancer agents either rely on overly simplified assays of individual protein activities in vitro or assaying for mitotic arrests in live cells. Since proper assembly of the mitotic spindle matrix is essential for not only mitosis but also cell survival, assaying for both spindle matrix assembly and microtubule polymerization offer the opportunity to identify agents that would both arrest and kill the highly proliferative cancer cells. Indeed, disruption of spindle matrix assembly in HeLa cells disrupts microtubule polymerization and causes rapid cell death in mitosis (see Example 1 and FIG. 4).

b. Identification of Agents That Modulate Cell Differentiation

Embryonic and adult stem cells hold great promise in cell-based treatment of human diseases. However, one of the biggest challenges in harnessing the differentiation potential of stem cells is identifying agents that can induce stable and uniform differentiation of stem cells into a given tissue. As disclosed herein, transcription factors and chromatin remodeling complexes that regulate cellular pluripotency and differentiation are components of the mitotic spindle matrix and they regulate the function of spindle matrix. Since these factors is essential for modulating stem cell differentiation, by assaying the assembly and function of mitotic spindle matrix and the association of transcription factors and chromatin remodeling complexes to the matrix, our invention offers a novel approach to identify agents that can modulate stem cell differentiation (see Example 2 and FIG. 5).

c. Identification of Agents That Promote Cell Proliferation

Abnormally slow or cessation of cell proliferation characterizes both natural and premature aging. Defects in lamin have been shown to cause premature aging in the group of diseases called laminopathy [35]. However, very little is known about the disease mechanism. Consequently, no effective treatment has been developed. The isolation of lamin-based spindle matrix offers a unique angle to identify agents that modulate mitotic lamin assembly during cell division. These agents can be further explored for therapeutic intervention. As an example, it is shown that lamin mutants disrupt the assembly of the spindle matrix, leading to defects in mitotic spindle assembly (see Example 3 and FIG. 6).

Screening Method

The present invention also provides methods of utilizing concentrated lysates made from eggs, embryos, or tissue culture cells to identify signal pathways of cell division and/or cell differentiation, and to screen for agonists and antagonists of these pathways. The invention is based upon a novel assay for microtubule nucleation, spindle formation, lamin and membrane-based assembly of mitotic spindle matrices. Such methods include comparison to a control to compare the effect of the agent to a known inhibitor or activator of a cell division and/or cell differentiation signaling pathway, including inhibitors and/or activators of spindle formation, MT nucleation, lamin and membrane-based spindle matrix assembly, translational control in mitosis, post-translational modifications in mitosis.

In one embodiment, a plurality of beads coated with one or more than one signaling molecules involved in a cell division and/or differentiation signaling pathway is used to assay spindle formation, MT nucleation, and/or lamin and membrane-based matrix assembly in the lysates of choice. The localization of these beads on spindles, MTs, and/or lamin-matrix is determined. The effect of these beads on spindle, MT, and/or lamin-matrix assembly can also be measured. In some embodiments, the beads are magnetic beads and/or quantum dots.

In another embodiment, the agent is included with a plurality of magnetic beads and/or quantum dots in a lysate of choice, each of said plurality of beads or dots coated with at least one protein in the presence or absence of said agent; and the effect on spindle formation, MT nucleation, and/or lamin and membrane-based matrix assembly as well as the effect on the localization of the molecule-coated beads is determined and/or measured, wherein the change in spindle formation, MT nucleation and/or lamin and membrane-based matrix assembly as well as the change of bead localization compared to a control indicates an agent capable of modulating a cell division and differentiation signaling pathway.

In a further embodiment, the molecule-coated magnetic beads can be used to isolate spindles, MTs, and lamin/membrane-matrix. Applicants have determined that magnetic beads coated with Aurora A kinase, a mitotic kinase essential for spindle assembly, enhances MT nucleation and spindle assembly in the presence of RanGTP by shortening the time required by at least three fold (FIG. 7). It is further disclosed the discovery of a lamin/membrane-based spindle matrix that is essential for spindle assembly (FIG. 8). Finally, lysates made from mammalian tissue culture cells such as the embryonic stem cells can also be used for assaying the assembly of the mitotic spindle matrix (FIG. 9).

Using the methods of the invention, specific proteins, mRNAs, and/or microRNAs that are involved in regulating the cell division and/or cell differentiation pathways could be identified without the need for carrying out other more extensive procedures. The methods for assaying cell division and/or differentiation signaling pathways described herein provide a facile means for identifying or screening selective modulators (i.e., activators and/or inhibitors) of proteins, mRNAs, and microRNAs. Upon exposure of selective modulators to the lysates, the altering of spindle formation, MT nucleation, or lamin and membrane-based matrix assembly, or the altering of association of proteins, mRNAs, and microRNAs with MTs and/or lamin and membrane-based matrices would indicate the perturbation of the cell division and or cell differentiation signaling pathways. The present invention thus takes advantage of the effect of selective modulation of signaling protein on spindle formation, MT nucleation and/or lamin assembly to identify its critical role in a cell division and/or cell differentiation signaling pathway because each of spindle formation, MT nucleation and/or lamin/membrane assembly is a critical event in the cell division and/or cell differentiation pathways.

In practicing the methods of the invention, it is not necessary that the identities of the particular cell division signaling and/or cell differentiation pathways are characterized or known, for example, the particular gene transcripts or expressed proteins, as the instant method relies upon the alterations in the patterns of such cell division and/or cell differentiation signaling pathways and not their identities. Knowledge of these identities may provide additional confirmation as to the role or function of the signaling protein being modulated.

As mentioned above, the effect on spindle formation, MT nucleation and/or lamin-membrane matrix assembly described herein can be correlated among several conditions and optional controls in which the outcome is the pattern of changes that are attributable to the selective modulation of the signaling agents of interest. The changes may be increases or decreases in the activity of a particular cell division and/or cell differentiation signaling pathways attributable to the inhibition of the particular signaling protein. Furthermore, the absence of a change in a particular cell division and/or cell differentiation signaling pathway may also be included among the controls. A significant alteration that may be considered an effect contributing to the pattern is dependent upon the particular cell division and/or cell differentiation signaling pathway being measured, whether the measurement is qualitative or quantitative, and the reproducibility of measurement and other factors. Typically, in a specific, reproducible and quantitative measurement, a change of about 1.5-fold to about 2-fold increase or decrease (including appearance or disappearance or kinetics) of spindle formation, MT nucleation, and/or lamin/membrane assembly, the association of proteins, mRNA, and/or microRNA with the spindles, MT, and/or lamin-membrane-matrices is considered a change resulting from the specific inhibition of the signaling protein. The identities of the particular elements of the cell division signaling pathways need not be determined, for example, the particular gene transcripts, proteins, or microRNA whose levels are altered. A skilled artisan will be aware of the variations in the measurement methods and the factors which must be considered in attributing the extent of change, or lack of a change, to a specific effect on spindle formation, MT nucleation and/or lamin-membrane assembly.

As noted above, the present invention has two broad aspects. In the first aspect, a method is provided to identify the role of one or more signaling proteins, transcript, or microRNA in one or more cell division and/or cell differentiation signaling pathways. In the second, the aforementioned method is utilized in identifying specific modulators (i.e., agonists or antagonists).

The method of the present invention for identifying the role of a signaling protein, transcript, and/or microRNA in a cell division and/or cell differentiation signaling pathway or agents which modulate a signaling protein, transcript, and/or microRNA is carried out by any of the following general procedures described herein. Various steps may be modified to achieve the same goal, such modifications will be readily apparent to the skilled artisan. To identify a pattern of cell division and/or cell differentiation signaling pathways attributable to the selective inhibition of a wild-type form of a preselected signaling molecule the following steps may be carried out. The order in which the steps is carried out is important insofar as steps requiring the products of previous steps must await the preparation of the required products. Certain steps are optional, these steps providing additional comparisons to increase the discriminatory ability of the method. As will be noted below, such additional steps increase the time required for the test, but increase the power to identify selective inhibitors or activators. Such additional steps may be excluded for high throughput screening, the steps added for increasing the discrimination.

First, one or more proteins, RNA, and/or lipids, referred to herein as the preselected signaling molecule, are coated on a plurality of beads, including magnetic beads and differentially colored quantum dots. If more than one molecule is used, they should be coated to different beads or dots to allow differentiation. A very large number of such signaling proteins are known, and have been identified as being involved in a number of important cellular pathways. Examples include, but are not limited to, kinases (such as Aurora A kinase, Aurora B kinase, polo kinase, Nek kinase, GSK3beta, CKII, mTor, PI3 kinase), phosphatases (such as PPI, PPIIA, PPIIB), cytoskeleton proteins (such as lamin B, lamin A, vimentin, actin, tubulin, TPX2, XMAP215, gamma-tubulin ring complex, Maskin), motor proteins and their regulators (such as dyneins, kinesins, myosins, dynactin, NudE, Nudel), regulators of dyneins or kinesins, chaperones (such as Hsp90, Hsp70, p97-Ufd1-Npl4), ubiquitination enzymes such as SCF and APC/C, deubiquitination enzymes (such as FAM), transcription factors (such as beta-catenin, Oct4, Sox2, and nanog), transcriptional regulators (such as p53, pRB, p300, histone acetylation or deacetylation enzymes, histone methylase or demethylase, SWI/SNF, NuRD), Caspases, G-proteins, regulators of G-proteins, growth factors, growth factor receptors, membrane associated proteins involved membrane remodeling and trafficking (such as clatherin, epsins, epsin related proteins), translational regulators (such as proteins involved in cytoplasmic polyadenylation, translation initiation proteins). RNA can be either coding or non-coding RNAs (such as mRNA, microRNA, tRNA, rRNA). As optional negative controls, uncoated beads or dots, or beads or dots coated with inactive proteins such as the Aurora A with a mutation in the catalytic domain of the kinase can be used.

The above beads are then contacted with the lysates made from oocytes, embryos, cultured cells, and/or tissues. The oocytes and embryos can come from animal source. The cultured cells include but not limited to embryonic stem cells, any established animal or plant cells. The cultured cells can also be engineered to express any labeled protein or mutant or wild-type signaling molecules. Tissues include animal or plant tissues. Several general methods can be used to disrupt the cells or tissues, including but not limited to sonication, French press, and homogenization.

Next, spindle, MTs, and lamin-matrix will be allowed to assemble by addition of purified GTP-bound Ran. The location of the magnetic beads and/or quantum dots on the assembled structures will be determined. Moreover, whether the beads or dots are associated with both MTs and lamin-matrix or only with MTs can be determined. Association of the beads or dots with MTs and/or lamin-matrix would indicate the coated protein could be involved in regulating cell division and/or the cell differentiation.

In another step, the structure with associated magnetic beads can be retrieved using magnet. The retrieved material can be subjected to partial purifications. The partial purification includes repeated washes with selected buffers to remove loosely associated materials. The buffers can also include chemicals that depolymerize either MTs or lamin-matrix. Proteins, lipids, mRNA, and microRNA can be extracted from the materials remained on the beads and identified using existing methods that can be carried out by a skilled artisan. The existing methods include mass spectroscopy, lipid chromatography, protein and DNA microarray technologies. Molecules identified in this manner (but are not found in the optional parallel control reactions) could be involved in regulating cell division and/or cell differentiation.

The above retrieved material can also be used for various enzymatic assays, including but not limited to kinase, phosphatase, acteylase/deacetylase, methylase/demethylase, mRNA polyadenylation, protein translation, MT nucleation. The above assays can also be carried out in the presence or absence of an agent. The agent can be chemicals, proteins, polypeptides, lipids, nucleic acids. The agent can be one that is known or suspected to selectively inhibit or activate a cell division or cell differentiation pathway. The agent can also be a chemical library. If the assays are carried out in the presence or absence of an agent, the outcome of the assays in the presence or absence of the agent will be compared. The following changes would indicate that the agent is involved in a cell division and/or cell differentiation pathway: the change of assembly pattern of spindle, MT, or lamin-membrane-matrix; the change of bead association pattern with spindle, MT, and/or lamin-membrane-matrix; the change of proteins, lipid, mRNA, and/or microRNA that are extracted from the magnet-retrieved structures as assayed by mass spectroscopy, lipid chromatography, protein and DNA microarray technologies; the change of enzymatic activities.

Methods of Treatment

This invention includes methods for the treatment of a disorder (i.e., disease) associated with a cell division signaling pathway in a mammal, including a human, comprising administering to said mammal an agent identified by the methods of the invention, or a pharmaceutical composition comprising an agent identified by the methods of the invention, that is effective in modulating (i.e., inhibiting or activating) a cell division signaling pathway associated with the disorder, without the addition of other therapeutic agents. In one embodiment of this method, the disorder includes, but not limited to, a proliferative or aging disease. In some embodiments, the proliferative disease is selected from the group consisting of cancer and blood vessel proliferative disorders. In a further embodiment, the cancer is selected from the group consisting of squamous cell carcinoma, astrocytoma, Kaposi's sarcoma, glioblastoma, multiple myeloma, lung cancer, bladder cancer, head and neck cancer, melanoma, ovarian cancer, prostate cancer, breast cancer, small-cell lung cancer, glioma, colorectal cancer, genitourinary cancer, gastrointestinal cancer. In yet a further embodiment, the blood vessel proliferative disorder is selected from the group consisting of diabetic retinopathy, age-related macular degeneration, retinopathy of prematurity, arthritis and restenosis. In some embodiments, the aging disease is laminopathy or progeria.

This invention also includes methods for the treatment of any of the above cell division signaling pathway disorders which comprises administering to said mammal, including a human, a pharmaceutical composition comprising an amount of an agent that identified by the methods disclosed herein that is effective in inhibiting abnormal cell growth. This includes the abnormal growth and/or proliferation of cancer cells including benign and malignant cells of neoplastic diseases. Inhibition of abnormal cell growth can occur by a variety of mechanism including, but not limited to, inhibition of cell division associated with spindle formation, MT nucleation and/or lamin matrix assembly, cell death, apoptosis, transcription, translation, transduction, etc.

In practicing the methods of this invention, the agents may be used alone or in combination with other inactive ingredients. The methods of the invention therefore include administration of an agent linked to a cytotoxic agent for the treatment of a disease associated with abnormal activity of a cell division and/or cell differentiation signaling pathway. Examples of cytotoxic agents include, but are not limited to, gelonin, ricin, saponin, pseudonomas exotoxin, pokeweed antiviral protein, diphtheria toxin, complement proteins, or any other agent known in the art which is capable of killing a cell upon contact with that cell.

The compositions and methods of the invention can be utilized in vivo, ordinarily in mammals, such as humans, sheep, horses, cattle, pigs, dogs, cats, rats and mice or in vitro. The invention is particularly useful in the treatment of human subjects.

The following working examples specifically point out specific embodiments of the present invention, and are not to be construed as limiting in any way the remainder of the disclosure. Other generic configurations will be apparent to one skilled in the art. All references, including U.S. or foreign patents, referred to in this application are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety. Furthermore, this application incorporates U.S. provisional application 60/735,168 and the scientific articles containing the content of said provisional application by reference in their entirety.

EXAMPLES Example 1 Induction of Mitotic Cell Death in HeLa Cells by Disrupting Mitotic Spindle Matrix

To disrupt the assembly of mitotic spindle matrix in HeLa cells, RanGTP-importin beta concentration was elevated throughout the mitotic cell by reducing the level of RanBP1, a Ran binding protein known to dissociate RanGTP from importin beta and stimulate RanGTP hydrolysis into RanGDP [36]. To accomplish this, HeLa cells were treated siRNA targeted to RanBP1 or control siRNA targeted to luciferase. A reduction of 75-90% of RanBP1 protein level is routinely achieved (FIG. 4A). RanGTP-importin beta levels were measurements using a Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) sensor called YIC [37, 38]. As expected, a high concentration of RanGTP-importin beta was detected on the condensed mitotic chromosomes in cells treated with control siRNA. However, in cells treated with RanBP1 siRNA, a high RanGTP-importin beta concentration was detected throughout the mitotic cytosol (FIG. 4B). This excessive production of RanGTP concentration led to aberrant assembly of both microtubules and mitotic spindle matrix in cells with reduced RanBP1 (FIG. 4C). As a result, cells treated with RanBP1 siRNA underwent extensive mitotic cell death (FIG. 4D). This example shows that by simultaneously disrupting microtubules and the spindle matrix, it is possible to kill cells undergoing mitosis.

Example 2 Changing the Levels of Sox2 and Oct4 Influences the Assembly of Both Mitotic Spindles and the Spindle Matrix

The mitotic spindle matrix was identified to contain transcription factors important for both maintaining stem cell pluripotency and differentiation (Table 1). Here, it is demonstrated that two such transcription factors, Sox2 and Oct4, which are known to regulate embryonic stem (ES) cell pluripotency and differentiation, can modulate the assembly of the mitotic spindle and spindle matrix. A balanced level of Sox2 and Oct4 is essential for maintaining the pluripotency of ES cells. Elevating one of these factors over the other leads to differentiation of ES cells into specific tissues. However, it is not clear what triggers such changes of Sox2 or Oct4 expression during ES cell differentiation. Moreover, how changes in Sox2 and Oct4 proteins lead to ES cell differentiation remains unknown. Therefore, it has not been possible to identify agents that could be used to induce ES cell differentiation by inducing the change of expression of Sox2 and Oct4. Addition of either bacterially expressed and purified Sox2 or Oct4 caused significant delay in the assembly of both the spindle and spindle matrix (FIG. 5). This finding provides an example of identifying agents that modulate cell differentiation by assaying the change of assembly kinetics of mitotic spindle/spindle matrix.

Example 3 The Requirement for Proper Assembly of Lamin B-Matrix in Spindle Formation

As shown in FIG. 8, immunodepleting lamin B in either HeLa cells or in Xenopus egg extracts severely inhibits spindle assembly and prevents the assembly of lamin B-matrices, further studies were carried out to see whether perturbing the structural integrity of the mitotic lamin B-matrix would also disrupt spindle assembly. Previous studies have shown that both the N- and C-termini of lamin B are required for the assembly of the protein into filaments in vitro [39]. To disrupt proper assembly of the mitotic lamin B-matrix, three mutant forms of lamin B3 (LB3, the major form of lamin B found in Xenopus eggs) were used, called ANLB3, LB3T, or LB3T-nls. These LB3 mutants could disrupt the organization of interphase nuclear lamina and proper nuclear structure and function [40]. ΔNLB3 lacks the N-terminal 32 amino acids of LB3 (583 amino acids in length). LB3T contains the last 200 amino acids of LB3, whereas LB3T-nls is made from LB3T by mutating the nuclear localization signal of the protein so that LB3T-nls does not bind to importin alpha. Wild-type and mutant LB3 proteins were expressed and purified from bacteria as 6His fusion proteins.

Xenopus sperm or RanGTP plus AurA-beads were used to stimulate spindle assembly in the presence of the LB3 variants at concentrations that could disrupt nuclear lamina assembly and nuclear function [40]. All three LB3 mutant proteins severely disrupted spindle assembly, whereas neither buffer control nor wild-type LB3 affected spindle assembly (FIG. 6).

Example 4 Creation of Anti-Aurora A (AurA) Antibodies

Rabbit polyclonal antibody to AurA was produced with His-tagged AurA expressed in bacteria [30, 32]. The antibody was affinity purified against the same AurA protein. The AurA antibodies produced from four different rabbits had the same ability to make AurA-beads that were competent for MT nucleation and spindle assembly. The antibodies against the following proteins have been described previously: AurA (ICI) [30], XMAP215 [25], TPX2 [30], gamma-tubulin [41], Eg5 [24], and dynein (Sigma). The magnetic beads (2.8 μm) are protein A-coated (Dynal Biotech). M-phase egg extracts were made as in [30].

Example 5 Preparation of Magnetic Beads

To prepare the beads, 10 μl of the slurry (2×10⁹ beads/ml) was washed with XB buffer (10 mM Hepes, pH 7.7, 50 mM sucrose, 100 mM KCl, 0.1 mM CaCl₂ and 5 mM EGTA). The beads were retrieved using magnet and then incubated with 10 μg of antibodies for one hour in 50 μl TBS. The beads were washed with XB buffer to remove unbound antibodies. To coat the beads with AurA, beads coated with AurA antibody were incubated with 100 μl of purified AurA or AurA-AA at a final concentration of 1 mg/ml for one hour at 4° C. Alternatively, the beads were incubated with 100-500 μl of M-phase egg extracts for one hour at 4° C. To coat the beads with XMAP215 (a microtubule binding protein), beads coated with XMAP215 antibody were incubated with 100 μl M-phase egg extracts for one hour at 4° C. After incubation, the beads were washed with XB buffer at 4° C. and then resuspended in 10 μl of XB buffer. This bead suspension was diluted 200 to 400 fold in egg extracts for MT assembly assays.

Since AurA-beads shortened the time necessary for spindle assembly, the reactions containing AurA-beads were generally incubated for 5 to 15 minutes at room temperature, while reactions containing XMAP215-beads or other control beads were carried out for 5 to 45 minutes at room temperature. The precise time of incubation was empirically determined for each egg extract.

Example 6 In the Presence of RanGTP, Aurora A Localizes to Spindle Poles and Microtubule Astral Centers

Xenopus egg extracts made from cytostatic factor arrested mature oocytes (M-phase extracts) offer a great in vitro system to study the assembly of centrosomes and spindles in mitosis. The use of this system has led to many discoveries, including the signaling pathway mediated by RanGTPase that stimulates spindle assembly in mitosis [29, 42]. However, the inability to detect the localization of AurA on centrosomes and spindles assembled in egg extracts and the lack of good functional assays for AurA have made it difficult to study the function of the kinase in the egg extracts [43].

To overcome these problems, rabbit polyclonal antibodies against Xenopus AurA (also called Eg2) were generated (see Example 4 above). The affinity-purified AurA antibody recognized AurA in egg extracts both by Western blotting and by immunoprecipitation (FIGS. 10A and B). Although this antibody recognized AurA at centrosomes and spindle poles in Xenopus tissue culture cells by immunostaining, it failed to detect AurA at the poles of spindles induced by RanGTP in Xenopus M-phase egg extracts (FIG. 10C). It was reasoned that spindles assembled in the egg extracts might have denser MTs than that of tissue culture cells, which could physically block AurA antibody to access AurA on spindle poles. Since the antibody recognized native AurA by immunoprecipitation, a small amount of antibody (60 ng/ml final) was added to M-phase extracts prior to the induction of aster and spindle assembly by RanGTP. The MT structures were then processed for immunofluorescence staining as described previously [25]. This treatment allowed detection of the highly concentrated AurA at the centers of MT asters and spindle poles (FIG. 10C). Quantification revealed that the low level of AurA antibody used during MT assembly did not inhibit aster and spindle assembly as compared to controls (FIG. 10D). This shows that AurA is concentrated at MT spindle poles and MT astral centers assembled in egg extracts.

Example 7 AurA Activation Mediated by TPX2 is Required for Spindle Assembly by RanGTP

The ability to detect AurA on MT structures assembled in Xenopus egg extracts allowed further exploration of the function of this kinase. Previously, it was demonstrated that TPX2 is essential for the activation of AurA by RanGTP in M-phase egg extracts [44]. Since the addition of mutant AurA-T294,295A (AurA-AA), which does not have kinase activity, greatly inhibited spindle assembly induced by RanGTP in M-phase extracts, it was proposed that AurA kinase activation through TPX2 is important for spindle assembly stimulated by RanGTP [44]. However, a recent study showed that the C-terminal region of TPX2, which does not bind or activate AurA, is sufficient to replace the endogenous TPX2 for spindle assembly induced by Xenopus sperm in M-phase egg extracts [43]. This suggested that AurA kinase activity stimulated by TPX2 might not be essential for spindle assembly.

To further study whether AurA kinase activation by the RanGTP-TPX2 pathway is essential for spindle assembly, a TPX2 mutant was created to manipulate AurA kinase activity. Since the first 43 amino acids of human TPX2 are essential for binding and activating AurA [45], the equivalent N-terminal amino acids (amino acid 1 to 40) of Xenapus TPX2 to create ΔNTPX2 were deleted. Both wild-type TPX2 and ΔNTPX2 were expressed as GST fusion proteins in bacteria. After purification, the GST tag was removed from the recombinant proteins by protease cleavage. TPX2 was immunodepleted from M-phase extracts and found that addition of RanGTP to mock-depleted, but not TPX2-depleted, M-phase extract led to AurA activation, as determined by autophosphorylation of the activation loop at threonine 295 of AurA with antibody recognizing phospho-T295 (FIG. 11A) (Tsai (2003) Nat. Cell. Biol. 5, 242-248). RanGTP-induced AurA activation in TPX2-depleted egg extracts could be rescued by adding purified wild-type TPX2. When ΔNTPX2 was added to the TPX2-depleted egg extracts, AurA activation was either completely lacking or slightly enhanced compared to the TPX2-depleted egg extract (FIG. 11A). Together, the above studies indicate that the N-terminal region of TPX2 is important for AurA activation by RanGTP.

To determine whether ΔNTPX2 could replace endogenous TPX2 to support spindle assembly stimulated by RanGTP, TPX2-depleted M-phase extracts were supplemented either with purified wild-type TPX2 or purified ΔNTPX2. Although addition of either protein rescued MT aster assembly induced by RanGTP, only TPX2 was able to significantly rescue spindle assembly (FIGS. 11B and C). AurA was concentrated at the centers of MT asters and spindle poles in mock-depleted extracts and in TPX2-depleted extracts with TPX2 add-back (FIG. 11B). However, although ΔNTPX2 was able to support MT aster assembly, AurA was not concentrated at the center of these asters (FIG. 11B). The lack of AurA localization to MT astral centers may explain why ΔNTPX2 was inefficient in rescuing spindle assembly in M-phase egg extracts that were depleted of TPX2 (FIG. 11C). Addition of ΔNTPX2 into TPX2-depleted egg extracts was found to always led to the assembly of significantly more MT asters, which could be due to the lack of spindle assembly in the egg extracts. The findings show that TPX2 binding and activation of AurA are required for spindle assembly stimulated by RanGTP. Since all of the reactions were carried out in the absence of centrosomes, these findings, without being bound by theory, further show that the activation of AurA kinase by TPX2 is required for spindle assembly in the absence of centrosomes.

To test if immunodepletion of TPX2 might be more complete than previously reported [43], Xenopus sperm was used to induce spindle assembly in egg extracts depleted of TPX2. The depletion of TPX2 was found to completely block spindle assembly. Only a few half spindles with either focused or unfocused poles were present in the egg extracts. Addition of purified TPX2 fully rescued spindle assembly to the control level, suggesting that the egg extract was not damaged by the manipulation. However, addition of ΔNTPX2 failed to cause significant rescue. Moreover, when TPX2 was gradually replaced by ΔNTPX2 in the add-back experiments, a gradual reduction of good bipolar spindle structures and a gradual increase of bad spindles and half spindles with either focused or unfocused poles were observed (FIG. 12). Therefore, without being bound by theory, AurA kinase activation by TPX2 is essential for spindle assembly either in the presence or absence of chromatin and centrosomes in Xenopus egg extracts.

Example 8 AurA-coated Magnetic Beads Function as MTOCs

Having established the important role of AurA activation in spindle assembly in Xenopus egg extracts, efficient functional assays to study how this kinase might regulate spindle assembly were developed. While attempting to immunodeplete AurA from M-phase egg extracts using the AurA antibody coupled to protein A magnetic beads, it was found that after stimulating the partially depleted egg extracts with RanGTP, the remaining AurA-beads localized to MT astral centers and spindle poles (FIG. 13A).

To further explore the above observation, magnetic beads were coated with AurA antibody, and then incubated the beads with either purified AurA or the kinase-dead AurA-AA. After incubation, the beads were washed with XB buffer [32] and then added to M-phase egg extracts in the presence or absence of RanGTP. The beads that were coated with AurA, but not AurA-AA, nucleated and organized MT asters and spindle poles only in the presence of RanGTP (FIG. 13B). Although spindles and asters were assembled in reaction containing AurA-AA-beads and RanGTP, the beads were not associated with MT structures. In the absence of RanGTP, neither type of beads induced MT assembly. This suggests, without being bound by theory, that in the presence of RanGTP, the AurA-coated beads may nucleate and organize MTs, and that the kinase activity of AurA is essential for this function.

Next, the ability of AurA-coated beads to nucleate MTs directly from pure tubulin solutions was studied. Beads were first coated with AurA or XMAP215 antibodies, XMAP215 coated on magnetic beads is known to nucleate MTs both in pure tubulin solutions and in Xenopus egg extracts [46]. AurA antibody-coated beads and XMAP215 antibody-coated beads were first incubated with M-phase egg extracts at 4° C. to make AurA-coated beads and XMAP215-coated beads, respectively. The retrieved beads were washed with XB buffer at 4° C. Quantitative Western blotting showed that similar numbers of AurA or XMAP215 molecules were coated on the beads. The beads were used to nucleate microtubules by incubating with increasing concentrations of purified tubulin. While XMAP215-beads began to nucleate MTs at 10 μM tubulin, AurA-beads did not nucleate MTs even at 20 gM tubulin (FIG. 13C). Thus, unlike XMAP215, AurA itself cannot nucleate MTs. Therefore, without being bound by theory, AurA-beads must be activated by RanGTP to recruit additional factors in the egg extracts to nucleate and organize MTs.

To test whether RanGTP could stimulate the recruitment of proteins necessary for MT nucleation and organization to AurA-beads, AurA-beads were incubated with M-phase extracts in the presence or absence of RanGTP and/or nocodazole (FIG. 13D). As expected, AurA-beads stimulated the assembly of many MT asters and spindles only in the presence of RanGTP (FIG. 13D). No MT structures were assembled in the absence of RanGTP or in the presence of RanGTP and nocodazole. Only the AurA-beads that were incubated without RanGTP or with both RanGTP and nocodazole were retrieved and washed. MT nucleation assays showed that only the AurA-beads that were incubated with RanGTP and nocodazole could nucleate MT asters (FIG. 13D). Therefore, without being bound by theory, RanGTP stimulates the stable recruitment of MT nucleating activities to AurA-beads.

Example 9 AurA-Coated Magnetic Beads Stimulate Microtubule Nucleation & Spindle Assembly by Functioning as Microtubule Organizing Centers (MTOC)

The effect of AurA-beads on MT asters and spindle assembly was studied. Beads coated with AurA, XMAP215, control IgG, or AurA-AA were added to M-phase extracts in the presence of RanGTP. Both AurA-beads and XMAP215-beads, but not AurA-AA-beads or IgG-beads, stimulated the assembly of MT asters (FIGS. 14A and B). Moreover, AurA-beads stimulated spindle assembly in about a third of the time that it took for spindle assembly to occur in extracts containing XMAP215-beads, AurA-AA-beads, or control IgG-beads. Examples of MT asters or spindles formed after 10 minutes of incubation in the presence of beads coated with AurA, XMAP215, control IgG, or AurA-AA are shown (FIG. 14A). At this time point, only AurA-beads induced spindle assembly (FIGS. 14A and B).

While AurA-beads were always localized to astral centers and spindle poles, XMAP215-beads were found at astral centers and along the spindles (FIGS. 14C, D, and E). In contrast, neither AurA-AA-beads nor control IgG-beads were associated with MT asters or spindles (FIGS. 14C, D, and E). To quantify the localization of beads on MT asters and spindles, the distribution of the beads along the spindles was first determined by dividing the spindles into three areas as shown (FIG. 14D). Over 90% of AurA-beads were found at the spindle pole regions, while XMAP215-beads were distributed along the spindle in all three areas (FIG. 14D). Since AurA-AA-beads or control IgG-beads showed little association with MT structures, in a sample of over 100 beads, no (control IgG-beads) or only a few (AurA-AA-beads) of these beads were associated with the spindles in one of the three regions.

Based on quantification of the percentage of asters having one or no beads at the astral centers, it was evident that while nearly 100% of asters had single AurA-beads or XMAP215-beads, few asters were associated with AurA-AA-beads or control IgG-beads (FIG. 14E).

Finally, the percentage of spindles having two beads, one at each spindle pole, or only one bead at one of the two poles was quantified. Nearly 90% of spindles assembled in the presence of AurA-beads had two beads with one at each of their poles, while most spindles assembled in the presence of XMAP215-beads had no beads at the spindle poles (FIG. 14E). As expected, neither AurA-AA-beads nor control IgG-beads showed significant association with spindle poles (FIG. 14E).

The above analyses showed that although AurA-beads and XMAP215-beads were both able to stimulate the assembly of MT asters, only AurA-beads accelerated spindle assembly in the presence of RanGTP (also see FIG. 7). Furthermore, while XMAP215-beads bound along spindles, individual AurA-beads were localized to each spindle pole. These findings suggest that AurA-beads nucleate and organize MTs in a different manner than that of XMAP215-beads in the presence of RanGTP. Since AurA-beads cannot nucleate MTs in the absence of RanGTP in the egg extracts, without being bound by theory, the beads must rely on the recruitment of MT nucleators and motor proteins in the extracts to function as MTOCs.

Example 10 MTOC Function of AurA-Beads Depends on MT Nucleators and MT-Based Motors

To further understand the MTOC function of AurA-beads, the contribution of MT nucleators TPX2 [47] and gamma-TuRC [41] to MT nucleation by the AurA-coated beads in the egg extract was investigated. Either TPX2 or gamma-tubulin were immunodepleted from M-phase egg extracts, and then used RanGTP to induce MT nucleation from AurA-beads or XMAP215-beads. Depletion of either TPX2 or gamma-tubulin significantly reduced MT nucleation by both AurA-beads and XMAP215-beads. Quantification revealed that when either nucleator was depleted, a higher proportion of AurA-beads failed to nucleate MTs as compared to XMAP215-beads (FIGS. 15A, B, and C). Therefore, MT aster assembly mediated by AurA-beads relies more heavily on MT nucleators than the assembly mediated by XMAP215-beads.

Since AurA-beads stimulated spindle assembly, the roles of two motors, the kinesin Eg5 and dynein, in MT nucleation and organization by AurA-beads was also examined. Inhibiting either Eg5 by Monastrol [48], or dynein by 70.1 antibody [25], completely disrupted spindle assembly in the egg extract containing either AurA-beads or XMAP215-beads. However, inhibition of dynein or Eg5 had a very different effect on the organization of MT asters formed by AurA-beads and XMAP215-beads. When dynein was inhibited over 90% of AurA-beads and XMAP215-beads could nucleate MT asters, and the MTs nucleated from XMAP215-beads were longer than those of AurA-beads. However, when Eg5 was inhibited, while most XMAP215-beads (>90%) were able to nucleate MT asters, only −40% of AurA-beads could nucleate MTs asters (FIG. 15D). Furthermore, the AurA-beads that did nucleate MT asters were found within hollow centers of the asters that had few MTs. These results indicate that both Eg5 and dynein are required for AurA-bead-based MT organization and spindle assembly. Furthermore, the two motors have different effects on MT organization mediated by AurA-beads and XMAP215-beads.

Example 11 Lamin Expression Constructs, Proteins, and Antibodies

The expression construct for EGFP-tagged human lamin B1 has been previously described [49]. 6His-tagged LB3 was made by cloning the full-length LB3 into the NcoI and HindIII sites of pET30a vector. 6His-taggd ΔNLB3 and LB3T were described [40, 50]. 6His-tagged or maltose-binding-protein-tagged LB3T-nls was made by mutagenizing RGKKRKLDE (the NLS of LB3) to RGASSKLDE resulting in LB3T-nls that does not bind to importin alpha. LB3T and LB3T-nls were expressed in bacteria at 25° C. for four hours, while LB3 and ΔNLB3 were expressed at 16° C. for 12 hours. The proteins were purified using Ni-agarose in with a Tris buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 25% Sucrose, 1% TritonX-100, 1 mM PMSF, and 5 mM imidazole). The purified proteins were exchanged into XB buffer (10 mM Hepes, pH 7.7, 50 mM sucrose, 100 mM KCl, 0.1 mM CaCl₂ and 5 mM EGTA) using a desalting column and concentrated to 1 mg/ml. Purification of RanL43E, RanQ69L, RanT24N, and importin alpha and beta were described previously [27]. All proteins were snap frozen in liquid nitrogen as small aliquots and stored at −80° C. Monoclonal antibody to Xenopus LB3 (L65D5), polyclonal antibodies to LB3, Xenopus importin alpha, and Xenopus NuMA were obtained from multiple sources. Rabbit antibodies against Eg5 were raised with the C-terminus of Xenopus Eg5 (amino acids: 811 to 1091) and affinity purified against the antigen. Antibodies to the following proteins were purchased: human lamin B 1 (Santa Cruz), human lamin B2 (Abcam), PAR (Tulip), gamma-tubulin (Sigma), and importin beta (Transduction Laboratories).

Example 12 RNAi Experiments in HeLa Cells

Regular (Dharmacon) or Stealth (Invitrogen) siRNAs corresponding to lamin B1 [aagcugcagaucgagcugggc (SEQ ID NO: 1) from Dhannacon and uucccaucaacaucaauuucuucga (SEQ ID NO: 2) from Invitrogen] and lamin B2 [aagaggaggaggaagccgagu (SEQ ID NO: 3) from Dhannacon and gaggucaacaagagcgccaagaaga (SEQ ID NO: 4) from Invitrogen] were used to down-regulate the respective lamin B in HeLa cells. SiRNAs corresponding to luciferase (aacguacgcggaauacuucga from Dharmacon) or Stealth negative control siRNA from Invitrogen were used for controls. 170 μM of Dharmacon siRNA or 4 μM of Invitrogen Stealth siRNA were used to transfect HeLa cells with Lipofectamine (Invitrogen). Cells were analyzed 48 or 72 hours after transfection to determine the level of lamin B reduction by Western blotting. For live cell imaging, HeLa cells were treated with siRNA for 48 hours followed by imaging on a temperature controlled stage at three minute intervals for 12 to 16 hours using a Hoffman modulation contrast objective lens on a Nikon TE200 microscope equipped with an Orca-2 camera. The appearance of a bar of chromosomes at the middle of the cell shows the beginning of chromosome alignment in prometaphase. Metaphase to anaphase transition is clearly detected as the chromosomal bar splits into two. The time elapsed was quantified from the appearance of the chromosomal bar to the splitting of the bar into two. At least 50 mitotic cells were analyzed in either control or lamin B RNAi-treatment. All lamin B siRNAs gave similar phenotypes.

Example 13 Assays for Spindle Assembly in Egg Extract

CSF-arrested Xenopus egg extracts, Xenopus sperm, and AurA-beads were prepared as described [32]. For spindle assembly induced by sperm, the egg extracts were used directly after crush-spin without further clarification spin. For spindle assembly induced by AurA-beads and RanGTP, the egg extracts were clarified at 12.5 krpm after crush-spin. Spindle assembly reactions were incubated at room temperature for 60 to 90 minutes with sperm or for 10 to 30 minutes with AurA-beads and RanGTP. To immunodeplete LB3, monoclonal antibody or polyclonal antibody to LB3 was coupled to protein A magnetic or agarose beads. IgG from non-immunized rabbits (Jackson Laboratory) was used for mock-depletion. To inhibit LB3 assembly with dominant negative LB3 mutants, LB3T and LB3T-nls were added at 10 μM final concentration, ΔNLB3 and wild-type LB3 were added at 2 μM final concentration to the egg extracts and incubated for 20 minutes before spindle assembly assays.

Example 14 Detection of Lamin B

To detect lamin B 1 and B2 in HeLa cells, the cells were fixed with methanol at room temperature for 20 minutes followed by immunostaining with antibodies against lamin B1, lamin B2, and tubulin. To detect EGFP-tagged lamin B1, HeLa cells were transfected with EGFP-lamin B1 expression vector using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) in the absence of serum for 8 to 12 hours, followed by incubating in fresh medium containing serum for 24 hours. The cells were fixed in methanol as described above and immunostained with tubulin antibody. To detect LB3 on spindles assembled in egg extracts, spindles were spun onto coverslips through a cushion consists of BRB80 buffer (80 mM Pipes pH 6.8, 1 mM EGTA, 1 mM MgCl2) and 40% glycerol and fixed with cold methanol (−20° C.) for five minutes before immunostaining.

Example 15 Detection, Assay, and Isolation of LB3-Membrane-Matrix in Egg Extracts

Two methods were used to assay for LB3-matrix assembled in egg extracts. In the first method, spindle assembly was induced with either sperm or AurA-beads plus RanGTP. After incubation, 10 μl of egg extract was diluted into 1 ml XB buffer containing nocodazole (10 μM final concentration) and incubated at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes to depolymerize MTs. In the second method, egg extracts were incubated with either sperm or AurA-beads plus RanGTP in the presence of 10 μM nocodazole at room temperature for the same time as for spindle assembly reactions. After incubated the egg extracts were diluted into 1 ml BRB80 buffer containing 30% glycerol. LB3-matrix assembled in both methods was spun onto coverslips through 3 ml BRB80 buffer containing 40% glycerol in the same manner as MT spin-down. The LB3-matrix were fixed with methanol (−20° C.) and stained with either polyclonal or monoclonal antibodies to LB3.

To detect the membrane in the lamin B matrix, spindles and LB3-matrices were assembled and spun onto coverslips as described above. The coverslips were incubated in BRB80 containing 20% sucrose and 1 μM Vybrant CM-Dil (Molecular Probes, V22888) for 5 minutes at room temperature and then washed briefly in BRB80 containing 20% sucrose. The structures were then fixed with methanol as above and then stained for LB3 (Alexa Fluor 488 goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody) and tubulin (Alexa Fluor 350 goat anti-mouse as secondary antibody). To determine that membrane is essential for the assembly of lamin B matrix, the spindles were assembled first and then diluted (100-fold) in XB containing nocodazole with or without 0.1% Triton X100 for 10 min at room temperature. The structures were spun onto coverslips and then stained with CM-Dil followed by immunostaining with LB3 and tubulin antibodies. Inclusion of 0.1% triton X100 in the buffer completely disrupted the lamin B matrix. Thus, membrane is an important component of the lamin B matrix

To isolate LB3-matrix, AurA-beads and RanGTP were added to 1 ml egg extracts followed by incubation at room temperature for 10 minutes. The egg extract was diluted into 25 ml BRB80 containing 30% glycerol. Spindles associated with AurA-beads were retrieved using magnet and then washed with 25 ml BRB80 containing 30% glycerol for three times. MTs were then depolymerized by incubating the spindles with 25 ml XB buffer containing 10 μM nocodazole. The remaining LB3-matrix was washed with 25 ml XB buffer containing 10 μM nocodazole two times, followed by washing with 25 ml XB for two more times to remove nocodazole. To release the matrix from AurA-beads, the beads were resuspended in 60 μl XB buffer and repeatedly pipetted. The released matrix was separated from the beads using magnet.

To assay microtubule assembly from the isolated matrix, 1 μl of the matrix was incubated with 10 or 20 μM tubulin in 39 μl of XB buffer at 30° C. for 20 minutes. The polymerized MTs were fixed with 1% glutaraldehyde and spun onto coverslips through a glycerol cushion followed by immunostaining.

Example 16 Requirement of Lamin B for Spindle Assembly in Human Cells and in Xenopus Egg Extracts

To determine whether lamin B plays a role in spindle assembly, either lamin B1 or lamin B2 were reduced in HeLa cells using siRNAs. Quantification revealed that reduction of either isoforms caused an increase of spindle defects as compared to control RNAi-treated cells. Consistent with the spindle defects, live imaging revealed that lamin B RNAi-treated cells spent a significantly longer time in prometaphase and metaphase as compared to controls (FIGS. 8A, B, C, and D). Thus, spindle assembly and function appears to require an appropriate level of both lamin B1 and lamin B2.

Since lamin B has an important function in the interphase nucleus, the spindle defects observed above could be an indirect effect of perturbing interphase nuclear functions. To determine whether lamin B has a direct role in spindle assembly, Xenopus LB3 was immunodepleted from M-phase egg extracts using either polyclonal or monoclonal antibodies. Depleting LB3 resulted in severe disruption of spindle assembly stimluared by sperm or AurA-beads plus RanGTP. Addition of bacterial expressed and purified LB3 rescued the spindle assembly in the depleted egg extracts (FIGS. 8E, F, and G). Therefore, lamin B was shown to have a mitosis-specific function in spindle assembly.

Example 17 Assembly of Lamin B-Containing Mitotic Spindle Matrix Induced by RanGTP

Purified lamin B neither bound to MTs assembled from pure tubulin nor promoted MT assembly in vitro (data not shown). As an intermediate filament protein, lamin B might associate with spindles as a polymer, which in turn might interact with SAFs to promote spindle assembly. To test this, spindles in egg extracts were made with either sperm or AurA-beads plus RanGTP. As a control, the egg extracts were incubated with AurA-beads plus dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO). DMSO can stimulate assembly of MT asters but not spindles [24]. After incubation at room temperature, MTs were depolymerized with nocodazole. As expected, whereas spindle assembly occurred in extracts containing either sperm or AurA-beads and RanGTP, only MT asters were present in extracts containing AurA-beads plus DMSO, and the asters were not associated with AurA-beads (FIG. 1). After MT depolymerization induced by nocodazole, a matrix-like network of LB3 surrounded over 90% of sperm chromatin or AurA-beads in reactions containing either sperm or AurA-beads plus RanGTP, respectively (FIG. 1). However, in the reaction containing AurA-beads and DMSO, few LB3-matrices were found and they did not show association with the AurA-beads (FIG. 1).

To study whether MT polymerization is necessary for the formation of LB3-containing matrix, matrix assembly in the presence or absence of MT polymerization were examined. AurA-beads and RanGTP or AurA-beads alone were incubated in egg extracts in the presence or absence of nocodazole. After incubation, MTs assembled in the reaction that lacked nocodazole were depolymerized with nocodazole. LB3-matrices were found to be assembled around AurA-beads in the presence of RanGTP whether MTs were allowed to polymerize or not (FIG. 1). However, if MTs were allowed to polymerize, a higher percentage of AurA-beads were associated with LB3-matrix than that of the reaction lacking MT polymerization. Moreover, whereas the LB3-matrix assembled with MTs completely surrounded the AurA-beads, the LB3-matrix assembled in the absence of MTs often only partially surrounded the beads. In the absence of RanGTP, little LB3-matrix was formed (FIG. 1). Therefore, RanGTP, but not MTs, is required for the assembly of LB3-matrix around the AurA-beads.

To examine the requirement of RanGTP and MTs for the assembly of LB3-matrices around sperm chromatin, either RanGTP production on the sperm chromatin with RanT24N (a dominant negative mutant Ran) or MT assembly was inhibited with nocadozole. Over 90% of sperm were associated with LB3-matrix in reaction containing sperm alone by 5 minutes of incubation (FIG. 1). Moreover, although assembly of MTs and LB3-matrix were apparent even with a short incubation time, the two structures did not always associate with one another and often LB3-matrix appeared to lead MT assembly (FIG. 1). When MT assembly was inhibited by nocodazole, LB3-matrix was still assembled around more than half of the sperm, but their sizes were smaller than those assembled in the presence of MTs (FIG. 1). RanT24N dramatically inhibited the assembly of LB3-matrix around the sperm (FIG. 1).

To examine whether the LB3-matrices observed above were initially associated with MTs, AurA beads were used to stimulate spindle assembly in the presence of RanGTP. Nocodazole was used to depolymerize MTs and samples taken at different time points after nocodazole addition were examined by immunostaining. LB3-matrix associated with MTs that were found to be undergoing different degree of depolymerization. The LB3-matrix remained even when all MTs were completely depolymerized (FIG. 1). However, TPX2 a MT-binding protein that is known to exhibit a similar dynamic behavior as tubulin, disappeared as MTs were disassembled in these reactions (FIG. 1). Thus, LB3 matrices were associated with MTs in mitosis.

Example 18 Retention of SAFs by Lamin B-Matrix After MT Disassembly

Two SAFs, NuMA and Eg5, have been implicated as part of or being tethered on a static structure corresponding to the putative spindle matrix [51, 52]. In addition, poly(ADP-ribose) (PAR) associates with mitotic spindles and is required for proper spindle assembly [53]. Since PAR detected on the spindle appeared more static than MTs and TPX2, it was hypothesized that PAR could be part of a static scaffold for spindle assembly [53]. To test whether LB3-containing matrix is part of the putative spindle matrix that tethers SAFs, sperm or RanGTP and AurA beads were used to induce spindle assembly followed by nocodazole treatment to reveal LB3-matrix. After MT disassembly, a number of SAFs: PAR, NuMA, Eg5, and XMAP215, remained as part of a matrix in addition to LB3. Both LB3-matrices and SAF-matrices exhibited similar association with AurA-beads with majority of the matrices containing one or two beads. Many matrices, which were associated with two beads, resembled spindles in size and shape. However, little TPX2-containing matrices remained after assembly (FIG. 16A). Thus, LB3 containing-matrix appears to be associated with SAFs.

To test this further, assembly of LB3-matrix with AurA-beads in the presence of nocodazole was induced, followed by double immunostaining using LB3 antibody and antibodies against SAFs. SAFs were found on the same matrices that contained LB3. Examples of Eg5 and XMAP215-containing matrices are shown in FIG. 16C. Comparing to the matrices assembled in the presence of MTs, most of the matrices assembled in the absence of MTs were associated with single AurA-beads (FIG. 16B).

To determine whether LB3 is the structural component of the observed matrices containing SAFs, LB3 was immunodepleted from M-phase extracts and were used sperm or RanGTP and AurA-beads to stimulate matrix assembly. Depleting LB3 inhibited the assembly of matrix structures containing PAR, NuMA, Eg5, and XMAP215. However, depleting either Eg5 or XMAP215 still allowed assembly of LB3-matrices that retained other SAFs (FIG. 16D). Therefore, lamin B is required for the assembly of a spindle-associated matrix that contains a number of SAFs.

Example 19 Disruption of LB3-Matrix Assembly by Importin Alpha and Beta

The studies in Examples 11 to 18 suggest that assembly of LB3-containing matrix requires RanGTP, but not MTs. Since LB3 contains a nuclear localization signal (NLS) at its C-terminus that can bind to importin alpha in vitro (FIG. 3A), it was examined whether RanGTP promoted LB3 assembly by displacing importin alpha and beta from LB3. In M-phase extracts, LB3 interacted with importin alpha and beta that could be inhibited by RanGTP (FIG. 3B). To test whether importin alpha and beta could disrupt the assembly of LB3-containing spindle matrix, the spindle assembly was induced with AurA-beads and RanGTP. After spindle assembly, MTs were depolymerized with nocodazole in the presence or absence of importin alpha and beta. Importin alpha and beta severely disrupted assembly of LB3-containing matrices that contained SAFs, and RanGTP could reverse this disruption (FIG. 3C). This suggests that one function of RanGTP in stimulating LB3-matrix in mitosis is to displace importin alpha and beta from LB3.

Example 20 Stimulation of MT Assembly by the Isolated LB3-Matrix

The studies in Examples 11-19 suggest the LB3-containing-matrix might promote MT assembly and organization during spindle assembly by tethering to SAFs. To test the function of LB3-matrix further, the matrix was isolated biochemically. Since centrifugation could pellet both spindles and other dense particulates in M-phase extracts that are not part of the spindle, a strategy was devised to isolate the matrix based on the observation that AurA-beads remained associated with spindles and matrices. Spindle assembly was induced in M-phase extracts by AurA-beads and RanGTP. The assembled MT structures were spun through a glycerol cushion or were retrieved using a magnet. Immunostaining or Coomassie blue staining showed that whereas similar amount of MT structures or tubulin, respectively, were isolated by each method, the magnet method isolated less other proteins than the spin-down method, suggesting that spindles retrieved by the magnet had less contaminants than that of spin-down. The magnet-retrieved structures were treated with nocodazole to depolymerize MTs and the remaining matrices were washed with buffer. The matrices were released from the AurA-beads by repeat pipetting and then the released matrices and AurA- beads were analyzed separately (FIG. 17A). The released matrices contained LB3, Eg5, NuMA, XMAP215, and PAR, but lacked TPX2 and tubulin (FIGS. 17B, C, and D).

The isolated matrix was incubated with pure tubulin to test their ability to nucleate and organize MTs in vitro. The matrix nucleated MT arrays that remained tethered to the matrix (FIGS. 17E and F). No MTs were assembled in the absence of the matrix. To test whether XMAP215 tethered on the isolated matrix could be responsible for MT nucleation, XMAP215 was immunodepleted in the egg extracts and then isolated the matrix in the same manner. These matrices contained little XMAP215 as expected and they failed to mediate MT assembly (FIGS. 17E and F). This suggests that the LB3-matrix could promote spindle assembly by tethering to SAFs to stimulate MT assembly and organization.

Example 21 The Spindle Matrix Components, FAM and p97-Ufd1-Npl4, Regulate Chromosome Alignment and Segregation by Modulating Survivin Ubiquitination

Proper chromosome segregation requires the attachment of sister kinetochores to microtubules from opposite spindle poles to form bi-oriented chromosomes on the metaphase spindle. The chromosome passenger complex containing Survivin and the kinase Aurora B regulate this process from the centromeres. Two spindle matrix components, a de-ubiquitinating enzyme, hFAM, and the ubiquitin selective chaperone p97-Ufd1-Npl4 regulate chromosome alignment and segregation by controlling the dynamic association of Survivin with centromeres and the proper targeting of Survivin and Aurora B to centromeres. Survivin is ubiquitinated in mitosis through both K48 and K63 ubiquitin linkages. K63 de-ubiquitination mediated by hFAM is required for dissociation of Survivin from centromeres, whereas K63 ubiquitination mediated by the ubiquitin binding protein Ufd1 is required for association of Survivin with centromeres. Thus, the spindle matrix-associated ubiquinaton activity regulates dynamic protein-protein interactions and chromosome segregation independently of protein degradation [54].

Example 22 The p97-Ufd1-Npl4 Chaperone Regulates Spindle Disassembly as Cells Re-enter Interphase

Spindle disassembly at the end of mitosis is a complex and poorly understood process. It was shown that the AAA-ATPase p97 and its adapters Ufd1-Npl4, which have a well-established role in membrane functions, also regulate spindle disassembly by modulating microtubule dynamics and bundling at the end of mitosis. In the absence of p97-Ufd1-Npl4 function, microtubules in Xenopus egg extracts remain as mono-polar spindles attached to condensed chromosomes after Cdc2 kinase activity has returned to the interphase level. Consequently, interphase microtubule arrays and nuclei are not established. Genetic analyses of Cdc48, the yeast homolog of p97, reveal that Cdc48 is also required for disassembly of mitotic spindles after execution of the mitotic exit pathway. Furthermore, Cdc48/p97-Ufd1-Npl4 directly binds to spindle assembly factors and regulates their interaction with microtubules at the end of mitosis. Therefore, Cdc48/p97-Ufd1-Npl4 is an essential chaperone that regulates transformation of the microtubule structure as cells re-enter interphase [55, 56].

REFERENCES

-   1. Pypaert, M., et al., Mitotic cytosol inhibits invagination of     coated pits in broken mitotic cells. J Cell Biol, 1991. 114: p.     1159-1166. -   2. Kano, F., et al., Cdc2 kinase-dependent disassembly of     endoplasmic reticulum (ER) exit sites inhibit ER-to Golgi vesicular     transport during mitosis. Mol Biol Cell, 2004. 15: p. 4289-4298. -   3. Schweitzer, J. K., et al., Endocytosis resumes during late     mitosis and is required for cytokinesis. J Biol Chem, 2005. 16: p.     41628-41635. -   4. Bharadwaj, R. and H. Yu, The spindle checkpoint, aneuploidy, and     cancer. Oncogene, 2004. 23: p. 2016-2027. -   5. Hetzer, M. W., T. C. Walther, and I. W. Mattaj, Pushing the     envelope: structure, function, and dynamics of the nuclear     periphery. Ann Rev Cell Dev Biol, 2005. 21: p. 347-380. -   6. Altan-Bonnet, N., R. Sougrat, and J. Lippincott-Schwartz,     Molecular basisfor Golgi maintenance and biogensis. Curr Opin Cell     Biol, 2004. 16: p. 364-372. -   7. Voeltz, G. K., M. M. Rolls, and T. A. Rapopport, Structural     organization of the endoplasmic reticulum. EMBO Rep, 2002. 3: p.     944-950. -   8. Scott, S. V., et al., Staying in aerobic shape: how the     structural integrity of mitochondria and mitochondrial DNA is     maintained. Curr Opin Cell Biol, 2003. 15: p. 482-488. -   9. Pearson, B. J. and C. O. Doe, Specification of temporal identity     in the developing nervous system. Ann Rev Cell Dev Biol, 2004.     20: p. 619-647. -   10. Emery, G. and J. A. Knoblich, Endosome dynamics during     development. Curr Opin Cell Biol, 2006. 18: p. 407-415. -   11. Betschinger, J. and J. A. Knoblich, Dare to be different:     asymmetric cell division in Drosophila, C. elelgans and vertebrates.     Curr Biol, 2004. 14: p. R674-685. -   12. Rowinsky, E. K. and E. Calvo, Novel agents that target tubulin     and related elements. Semin Oncol, 2006. 33: p. 421-435. -   13. Hirai, H., N. Kawanishi, and Y. Iwasawa, Recent advances in the     development of selective molecular inhibitors for cyclin-dependent     kinases. Curr Top Med Chem, 2005. 5: p. 167-179. -   14. Strebhardt, K. and A. Ullrich, Targeting polo-like kinase I for     cancer therapy. Nat Rev Cancer, 2006. 6: p. 321-330. -   15. Mortlock, A. A., et al., Progress in the development of     selective inhibitors of aurora kinases. Curr Top Med Chem, 2005.     5: p. 807-821. -   16. Weaver, B. A. A. and D. W. Cleveland, Decoding the links between     mitosis, cancer, and chemotherapy: The mitotic checkpoint,     adaptation, and cell death. Cancer Cell, 2005. 8: p. 7-12. -   17. Compton, D., Spindle assembly in animal cells. Ann Rev     Biochem, 2000. 69: p. 95-114. -   18. Scholey, J. M., I. Brust-Mascher, and A. Mogilner, Cell divison.     Nature, 2003. 422: p. 746-752. -   19. Pickett-Heaps, J. D., The evolution of the mitotic apparatus: an     attempt at comparative ultrastructural cytology in dividing plant     cells. Cytobios, 1969. 3: p. 257-280. -   20. Pickett-Heaps, J. D., Mitotic mechanisms an alternative view.     Trends Biochem Sci, 1986. 11: p. 504-509. -   21. Pickett-Heaps, J. D., D. H. Tippit, and K. R. Porter, Rethinking     mitosis. Cell, 1982. 29: p. 729-744. -   22. Carazo-Salas, R. E., et al., Generation of GTP-bound Ran by RCC1     is required for chromatin-induced mitotic spindle formation.     Nature, 1999. 400(6740): p. 178-81. -   23. Carazo-Salas, R. E., et al., RanGTP coordinates the regulation     of microtubule nucleation and dynamics during mitotic spindle     assembly. Nat Cell Biol, 2001. 3: p. 228-234. -   24. Wilde, A., et al., Ran stimulates spindle assembly by changing     microtubule dynamics and the balance of motor activities. Nat Cell     Biol, 2001. 3: p. 221-227. -   25. Wilde, A. and Y. Zheng, Stimulation of microtubule aster     formation and spindle assembly by the small GTPase Ran.     Science, 1999. 284(5418): p. 1359-1362. -   26. Nachury, V. M., et al., Importin β is a mitotic target of the     small GTPase Ran in spindle assembly. Cell, 2001. 104: p. 95-106. -   27. Wiese, C., et al., Role of importin-β in coupling Ran to     downstream targets in microtubule assembly. Science, 2001. 291: p.     653-656. -   28. Gruss, O. J., et al., Ran induces spindle assembly by reversing     the inhibitory effect of importin α on TPX2 activity. Cell, 2001.     104: p. 83-92. -   29. Zheng, Y., G protein control of microtubule assembly. Ann Rev     Cell Dev Biol, 2004. 20: p. 867-894. -   30. Tsai, M.-Y., et al., A Ran signalling pathway mediated by the     mitotic kinase Aurora A in spindle assembly. Nat Cell Biol, 2003.     5: p. 242-248. -   31. Ducat, D. C. and Y. Zheng, Aurora kinases in spindle assembly     and chromosome segregation. Exp Cell Res, 2004. 301: p. 60-67. -   32. Tsai, M.-Y. and Y. Zheng, Aurora A kinase-coated beads function     as microtubule organizing centers and enhance RanGTP-induced spindle     assembly. Curr Biol, 2005. i15: p. 2156-2163. -   33. Tsai, M.-Y., et al., A mitotic lamin B matrix induced by RanGTP     required for spindle assembly. Science, 2006. 311 (Published online     Mar. 16, 2006; 10.1 126/science.1122771): p. 1887-1893. -   34. Sillje, H. H. and E. Nigg, Purification of mitotic spindles from     cultured human cells. Methods, 2006. 38: p. 25-28. -   35. Mattout, A., et al., Nuclear lamins, diseases and aging. Curr     Opin Cell Biol, 2006. 18: p. 335-341. -   36. Kehlenback, R. H., et al., Stimulation of nuclear export and     inhibition of nuclear import by a Ran mutant deficient in binding to     Ran-binding protein 1. J. Biol. Chem., 2001. 276: p. 14524-14531. -   37. Li, H. Y. and Y. Zheng, Phosphorylation of RCC1 in mitosis is     essential for producing a high RanGTP concentration on chromosomes     and for spindle assembly in mammalian cells. Genes &     Development, 2004. 18: p. 512-527. -   38. Li, H., D. Wirtz, and Y. Zheng, A mechanism of coupling RCC1     mobility to RanGTP production on the chromatin in vivo. J Cell     Biol, 2003. 160: p. 635-644. -   39. Goldman, D. G., et al., Nuclear lamins: building blocks of     nuclear architecture. Genes & Development, 2002. 16: p. 533-547. -   40. Moir, R. D., et al., Disruption of nuclear lamin organization     blocks the elongation phase of DNA replication. J Cell Biol, 2000.     149: p. 1179-1192. -   41. Zheng, Y., et al., Nucleation of microtubule assembly by a     gamma-tubulin-containing ring complex. Nature, 1995. 378(6557): p.     578-583. -   42. Karsenti, E. and 1. Vernos, The mitotic spindle: a self-made     machine. Science, 2001. 294: p. 543-547. -   43. Brunet, S., et al., Characterization of the TPX2 domains     involved in microtubule nucleation and spindle assembly in Xenopus     egg extracts. Mol Biol Cell, 2004. 15: p. 5318-5328. -   44. Tsai, M. Y., et al., A Ran signaling pathway mediated by the     mitotic kinase Aurora A in spindle assembly. Nat Cell Biol, 2003.     5: p. 242-248. -   45. Bayliss, R., et al., Structural basis of Aurora A activation by     TPX2 at the mitotic spindle. Mol Cell, 2003. 12: p. 851-862. -   46. Popov, A. V., F. Severin, and E. Karsenti, XMAP215 regulates     microtubule-nucleating activity of centrosomes. Curr Biol, 2002.     12: p. 1326-1330. -   47. Schatz, C. A., et al., Importin α-regulated nucleation of     microtubules by TPX2. EMBO J, 2003. 22: p. 2060-2070. -   48. Mayer, T. U., et al., Small molecule inhibitor of mitotic     spindle bipolarity identified in a phenotype-based screen.     Science, 1999. 286: p. 971-974. -   49. Beaudouin, J., et al., Nuclear envelope breakdown proceeds by     microtubule-induced tearing of the lamina Cell, 2002. 108: p. 83-96. -   50. Lopez-Soler, R. I., et al., A role for nuclear lamins in nuclear     envelope assembly. J Cell Biol, 2001. 154: p. 61-70. -   51. Kapoor, T. M. and T. J. Mitchison, Eg5 is static in bipolar     spindles relative to tubulin: evidence for a static spindle matrix.     J Cell Biol, 2001. 154: p. 1125-1133. -   52. Kisurina-Evgenieva, O., et al., Multiple mechanisms regulate     NuMA dynamics at spindle poles. J Cell Sci, 2004. 117: p. 6391-6400. -   53. Chang, P., M. K. Jacobson, and T. J. Mitchison, Poly(ADP-ribose)     is required for spindle assembly and structure. Nature, 2004.     432: p. 645-649. -   54. Vong, Q. P., et al., Chromosome alignment and segregation     regulated by ubiquitination of Surivin. Science, 2005. 310: p.     1499-1504. -   55. Cao, K., et al., The AAA-ATPase Cdc48/p97 regulates spindle     disassembly at the end of mitosis. Cell, 2003. 115: p. 355-367. -   56. Cao, K. and Y. Zheng, The Cdc48/p97-Ufd1-Npl4 complex: its     potential role in coordinating cellular morphogenesis during M-G1     transition. Cell Cycle, 2004. 3: p. 422-424.

Although the present invention has been described in detail with reference to examples above, it is understood that various modifications can be made without departing from the spirit of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is limited only by the following claims. All cited patents, applications and publications referred to in this application are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety. TABLE 1 SEQ ID NO. cytoskeleton/extracellular matrix 1 gi|89037011|ref|XP_946300.1| PREDICTED: similar to FRAS1-related extracellular matrix protein 2 precursor (ECM3 homolog) [Homo sapiens] 2 gi|63102077|gb|AAH95906.1| Fibronectin 1 [Xenopus tropicalis] . . . 4793 0.0 3 gi|46249406|ref|NP_996816.1| usherin isoform B [Homo sapiens] 4 gi|27436951|ref|NP_116126.2| lamin B2 [Homo sapiens] 5 gi|55664839|emb|CAH70275.1| tubulin, gamma complex associated protein 2 [Homo sapiens] 6 gi|73985015|ref|XP_541779.2| PREDICTED: similar to tubulin tyrosine ligase-like family, member3 isoform 1 [Canis familiaris] 7 gi|45382519|ref|NP_990250.1| putative microtubule associated protein [Gallus gallus] 8 gi|33317819|gb|AAQ04821.1| rho-GTPase activating protein [Xenopus laevis] 9 gi|55960150|emb|CAI15040.1| par-3 partitioning defective 3 homolog (C. elegans) [Homo sapiens] 10 gi|9454519|gb|AAF87845.1| hyaluronan synthase 1 [Homo sapiens] 11 gi|89026152|ref|XP_945898.1| PREDICTED: similar to Piccolo protein (Aczonin) isoform 12 [Homo 12 gi|52630453|gb|AAT67990.2| ninein-like protein [Xenopus laevis] 13 gi|66793427|ref|NP_598684.3| tubulin tyrosine ligase-like family, member 3 [Mus musculus] 14 gi|89268903|emb|CAJ83714.1| Rap guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) 1 [Xenopus tropicalis] 15 gi|45382743|ref|NP_990815.1| hepatic lectin [Gallus gallus] 16 gi|57162642|emb|CAI39861.1| ficolin (collagenVfibrinogen domain containing lectin) 2 (hucolin[Hs] 17 gi|55976183|sp|P68512|FEL_CYPCA Fish-egg lectin (FEL) 18 gi|25989472|gb|AAL86575.1| egg cortical granule lectin [Xenopus tropicalis] 19 gi|17266316|gb|AAL35743.1| peripherin-2 [Xenopus laevis] 20 gi|33573997|emb|CAE38317.1| filamentous hemagglutinin/adhesin [Bordetella parapertussis] 21 gi|1929449|gb|AAB51432.1| endodermin [Xenopus laevis] 22 gi|62664063|ref|XP_344648.2| PREDICTED: similar to Aggrecan core protein precursor (Cartilage-specific proteoglycan core protein) [Rattus norvegicus] 23 gi|109067896|ref|XP_001090393.1| PREDICTED: laminin, beta 1 [Macaca mulatta] 24 gi|73959831|ref|XP_537020.2| PREDICTED: similar to katanin p80 (WD40-containing) subunit B 25 gi|438056|emb|CAA81394.1| laminin M chain (merosin) [Homo sapiens] 26 gi|103715|pir||S12838 lg mu chain precursor - little skate 27 gi|74096297|ref|NP_001027644.1| tektin A1 [Ciona intestinalis] 28 gi|27262622|ref|NP_065176.2| neuron navigator 1 [Homo sapiens 29 gi|55665808|emb|CAH70931.1| formin 2 [Homo sapiens] 30 gi|55537659|gb|AAV52890.1| zonadhesin-like [Salmo salar] 31 gi|117452|sp|P02531|CRG2_RANTE Gamma crystallin 2 (Gamma crystallin II)[Rana sp.] 32 gi|33301664|sp|Q99N48|SYTL3_MOUSE Synaptotagmin-like protein 3 (Exophilin-6) 33 gi|76656478|ref|XP_871039.1| PREDICTED: similar to Testican-2 precursor (SPARC/osteonectin, CWCV, and Kazal-like domains proteoglycan 2) isoform 2 34 gi|5305166|emb|CAB46194.1| myelin proteolipid protein (PLP) [Xenopus laevis] 35 gi|6636514|gb|AAF20208.1| cingulin [Xenopus laevis] 36 gi|110082727|ref|NP_001006351.2| subcommissural organ spondin [Gallus gallus] 37 jgi|Xentr4|10496|gw1.279.1.1, collagen like surface protein 38 jgi|Xentr4|12567|gw1.440.6.1, type I alpha-keratin 14 of Gallus gallus 39 jgi|Xentr4|16936|gw1.77.48.1, similar to collagen 40 jgi|Xentr4|38007|gw1.1219.24.1. mucin-4 (Tracheobronchial mucin) Rattus 41 jgi|Xentr4|167568|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_154000075, type XXVII alpha 1 collagen 42 gi|22652113|gb|AAN03620.1| alpha 1 type XXII collagen [Homo sapiens] 43 gi|55647633|ref|XP_523978.1| PREDICTED: similar to Collagen [Pan troglodytes] 44 gi|51315966|sp|Q86XX4|FRAS1_HUMAN Extracellular matrix protein FRAS1 precursor 45 gi|15811172|gb|AAL08844.1| cell surface mucin-like protein [Cowdria ruminantium] 46 gi|59676577|ref|NP_067337.1| pregnancy-associated plasma protein A [Mus musculus] 47 gi|57209935|emb|CAI42344.1| inter-alpha (globulin) inhibitor . . . 48 gi|55960315|emb|CAI12111.1| bullous pemphigoid antigen 1, 230 V240 kDa [Homo sapiens] 49 gi|1754969|gb|AAC24314.1| collagen type XIII alpha-1 chain [Mus musculus 50 gi|31083306|ref|NP_114141.1| hemicentin 1 [Homo sapiens] 51 gi|57208608|emb|CAI40758.1| collagen, type IV, alpha 6 [Homo sapiens] 52 gi|12007284|gb|AAG45109.1| putative transmembrane protein TA-2 [Xenopus laevis] 53 gi|4704343|dbj|BAA77247.1| alias DLC1-candidate tumor suppressor gene [Homo sapiens] Deleted in lung esophageal cancer protein 1 Transcript/translation/replication/RNA processing 54 gi|89267461|emb|CAJ83573.1| Werner syndrome homolog (human) 55 gi|61102725|ref|NP_291029.2| la related protein isoform 2 [Homo sapiens] 56 gi|288174|emb|CAA37702.1| Oct2b [Mus musculus] 57 gi|55663522|emb|CAH72285.1| RNA terminal phosphate cyclase-like 1 [Homo sapiens] 58 jgi|Xentr4|294554|estExt_fgenesh1_kg.C_3740006, similar to GC-rich sequence DNA-binding factor candidate isoform 1 [Homo sapiens] 59 gi|45595592|gb|AAH67315.1| Brachyury-like T-box transcription factor [Xenopus tropicalis] 60 gi|73976737|ref|XP_848535.1| PREDICTED: similar to Zinc finger protein Rlf (Rearranged L-myc[Canis] 61 gi|34870273|ref|XP_216504.2| PREDICTED: similar to TOE1 homolog [Rattus norvegicus] 62 gi|73974662|ref|XP_848463.1| PREDICTED: similar to LINE-1 reverse transcriptase homolog [Canis 63 gi|50750824|ref|XP_422162.1| PREDICTED: similar to telomere-associated protein RlF1 [Gallus] 64 gi|29436363|gb|AAH49826.1| Regulatory factor X, 1 (influences HLA class II expression) [Homo sapiens] 65 gi|73979934|ref|XP_540125.2| PREDICTED: similar to general transcription factor IIIC, polypeptide 2, beta 110 kDa isoform 1 [Canis familiaris] 66 gi|47575766|ref|NP_001001227.1| PAI-1 mRNA-binding protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 67 gi|50759872|ref|XP_417822.1| PREDICTED: similar to 5-nucleotidase [Gallus gallus] 68 gi|4894647|gb|AAD32572.1| mitochondrial DNA polymerase accessory subunit precursor [Xenopus laevis] 69 gi|50511310|ref|NP_067506.2| coactivator-associated arginine methyltransferase 1 [Mus musculus] 70 gi|18568414|gb|AAL76077.1| BRG1-binding protein ELD/OSA1 [Homo sapiens] 71 gi|84570560|dbj|BAE72677.1| Sox1 [Xenopus laevis] 72 gi|73992482|ref|XP_543007.2| PREDICTED: similar to R3H domain (binds single-stranded nucleic acids) containing-like [Canis familiaris] 73 gi|27734871|ref|NP_775831.1| regulatory factor X domain containing 1 [Homo sapiens] 74 gi|110593953|ref|ZP_01382302.1| deoxyuridine 5′-triphosphate nucleotidohydrolase (dut) [Acidovorax sp. JS42] 75 gi|111281088|gb|EAT94773.1| RNA polymerase-binding, DksA [Acidovorax avenae subsp. citrulli AAC00-1] 76 gi|45501262|gb|AAH67308.1| Cbp/p300-interacting transactivator, with Glu/Asp-rich carboxy-terminal domain, 2 [Xenopus tropicalis] 77 gi|89272515|emb|CAJ81560.1| heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein R [Xenopus tropicalis] 78 jgi|Xentr4|13696|gw1.68.11.1, 50% identical to the C-terminus of the TAR RNA binding protein 1 in Danio 79 jgi|Xentr4|140123|gw1.38.389.1, 61% identical to chrmodomain helicase DNA binding protein 6 80 jgi|Xentr4|141066|gw1.16.167.1, 60% identical to La ribonucleoprotein domain family member 2 isoform1 [Homo sapiens] 81 gi|20140802|sp|Q9GZL7|WDR12_HUMAN WD-repeat protein 12 (YTM1 homolog, 60S ribosome biogenesis protein) 82 gi|5225312|gb|AAD40846.1| calcineurin binding protein cabin 1 [Homo sapiens] 83 gi|20987779|gb|AAH30514.1| Tudor domain containing 3 [Homo sapiens 84 gi|86198292|tpe|CAJ70648.1| TPA: mini-chromosome maintenance deficient 9 [Homo sapiens] 85 gi|12804139|gb|AAH02923.1| POT1 protection of telomeres 1 homolog (S. pombe) [Homo sapiens] 86 gi|12018250|ref|NP_072113.1| telomerase associated protein 1 [Rattus norvegicus] 87 gi|105391|pir||S12741 transcription factor ATF-a - human 88 gi|30425542|ref|NP_060045.3| Smg-6 homolog, nonsense mediated mRNA decay factor [Homo sapiens] 89 gi|55743092|ref|NP_068745.2| aristaless-like homeobox 4 [Homo sapiens] 90 gi|5921169|sp|O15265|ATX7_HUMAN Ataxin-7 (Spinocerebellar ataxia type 7 protein) 91 gi|89267424|emb|CAJ81598.1| msh homeo box homolog 1 (Drosophila) [Xenopus tropicalis] 92 gi|16306637|gb|AAH01494.1| WD repeat domain 57 (U5 snRNP specific) [Homo sapiens] 93 gi|55958513|emb|CAI16236.1| MDN1, midasin homolog (yeast) [Homo sapiens] 94 gi|62859649|ref|NP_001016724.1| eukaryotic translation initiation factor 3, subunit 9 eta, 116 kDa[tropocalis 95 gi|94957752|ref|NP_001035555.1| dicer1 [Gallus gallus] 96 gi|109015253|ref|XP_001094726.1| PREDICTED: similar to B-cell CLL/lymphoma 9 [Macaca mulatta] 97 gi|14670356|ref|NP_001509.2| general transcription factor II, i isoform 4 [Homo sapiens] 98 gi|73964175|ref|XP_547842.2| PREDICTED: similar to sine oculis homeobox homolog 4 [Canis familiaris 99 gi|50754123|ref|XP_414254.1| PREDICTED: similar to Scm-like with four mbt domains 1 [Gallus] 100 gi|50730217|ref|XP_416812.1| PREDICTED: similar to sex comb on midleg-like 2; sex comb onmidleg like 2; sex comb on midleg (Drosophila)-like 2 [Gallus] 101 gi|11071924|dbj|BAB17310.1| Prox 1 [Xenopus laevis] 102 gi|74007597|ref|XP_538072.2| PREDICTED: similar to Mediator of RNA polymerase II transcriptionsubunit 12[Canis familiaris] 103 gi|33286444|ref|NP_115803.1| mastermind-like 2 [Homo sapiens] 104 gi|45502007|emb|CAE55170.1| v-myb myeloblastosis viral oncogene homologue (avian) [Homo sapiens] 105 gi|50603921|gb|AAH77298.1| Hoxc10 protein [Xenopus laevis] 106 gi|1527205|gb|AAB07733.1| XLPAX6 [Xenopus laevis] 107 gi|14603259|gb|AAH10089.1| ASMTL protein [Homo sapiens] 108 gi|71894997|ref|NP_001026391.1| AT rich interactive domain 5B (MRF1-like) [Gallus gallus] 109 gi|3116208|dbj|BAA25919.1| p100-NFkappaB2 [Xenopus laevis] 110 gi|1351170|sp|P47897|SYQ_HUMAN Glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (Glutamine-tRNA ligase) 111 gi|19923796|ref|NP_057022.2| NMD3 homolog [Homo sapiens] 112 gi|46430503|ref|NP_766458.2| basonuclin 2 [Mus musculus] 113 gi|24047226|gb|AAH38596.1| CHD4 protein [Homo sapiens] 114 gi|1041396|emb|CAA62967.1| valyl-tRNA synthetase [Takifugu rubripes] 115 gi|98162787|ref|NP_001025982.2| REV1-like [Gallus gallus] 116 gi|57209991|emb|CAI42769.1| BCL6 co-repressor-like 1 [Homo sapiens] 117 gi|89514893|gb|AAV35204.2| Fanconi anemia complementation group D2 [Xenopus laevis 118 gi|68533081|dbj|BAE06095.1| EIF4G1 variant protein [Homo sapiens] 119 gi|14970562|emb|CAC44371.1| WDR9 protein, form A [Homo sapiens] 120 gi|72084351|ref|XP_783196.1| PREDICTED: similar to Grp94 neighboring nucleotidase isoform 121 gi|11558488|emb|CAC17726.1| B-cell lymphoma/leukaemia 11B [Homo sapiens] 122 gi|20809676|gb|AAH29269.1| Polyhomeotic-like 2 (Drosophila) [Homo sapiens] 123 gi|68441629|ref|XP_697980.1| PREDICTED: similar to FFA-1 protein, partial [Danio rerio] 124 gi|55740224|gb|AAV63799.1| shirin [Xenopus laevis] 125 gi|549839|sp|Q05481|ZNF91_HUMAN Zinc finger protein 91 (Zinc finger protein HTF10) (HPF7) 126 gi|60729644|pir||JC7992 negatively regulating zinc finger protein, NZFP - African clawed 127 gi|76789661|sp|Q9UL68|MYT1L_HUMAN Myelin transcription factor . . . 1611 0.0 128 gi|55663458|ref|XP_521130.1| PREDICTED: similar to SNF2/RAD54 . . . 949 0.0 Kinases/phosphatases 129 gi|62002572|gb|AAX58777.1| eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2-alpha kinase 2 [Canis familiaris] 130 gi|28574630|ref|NP_788546.1| retinal degeneration C CG6571-PD, isoform D [Drosophila melanogaster] 131 gi|72003660|ref|NP_001024972.1| abnormal cell MIGration family member (mig-15) [C elegans] 132 gi|68360378|ref|XP_687499.1| PREDICTED: similar to Adenylate kinase isoenzyme 2, mitochondrial 133 gi|76639487|ref|XP_871220.1| PREDICTED: similar to myotubularin-related protein 3 isoform 134 gi|76615427|ref|XP_870303.1| PREDICTED: similar to parvin, gamma isoform 3 [Bos taurus] 135 gi|29788755|ref|NP_112224.1| SET binding factor 2 [Homo sapiens] 136 gi|109482274|ref|XP_001068781.1| PREDICTED: similar to otoferlin isoform a [Rattus norvegicus] 137 gi|73951196|ref|XP_545823.2| PREDICTED: similar to leucine-rich repeat kinase 1 [Canis familiaris] 138 gi|49364656|gb|AAT65679.1| greatwall kinase [Xenopus laevis] 139 gi|4502739|ref|NP_003927.1| cyclin-dependent kinase 5, regulatory subunit 2 [Homo sapiens] 140 gi|27901803|ref|NP_006733.1| protein serine kinase H1 [Homo sapiens] 141 gi|3213217|gb|AAC64675.1| IkB kinase beta subunit; IKK beta [Homo sapiens] 142 gi|23271297|gb|AAH36091.1| CDKL5 protein [Homo sapiens] 143 gi|3559927|emb|CAA75226.1| nucleoside-diphosphate kinase [Homo sapiens] 144 gi|130744|sp|P09923|PPBI_HUMAN Intestinal alkaline phosphatase precursor (IAP) 145 gi|1009410|emb|CAA88759.1| BMPR-II precursor [Homo sapiens] 146 gi|55957928|emb|CAI14227.1| mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 8 [Homo sapiens] 147 gi|49522902|gb|AAH75119.1| NIMA (never in mitosis gene a)-related kinase 3 [Xenopus tropicalis] 148 gi|25304069|gb|AAH40061.1| Protein kinase C-like 1, isoform 2 [Homo sapiens] 149 gi|38197376|gb|AAH61836.1| Protein kinase N1 [Rattus norvegicus] 150 gi|97537162|sp|Q15772|SPEG_HUMAN Striated muscle preferentially expressed protein kinase 151 gi|406323|emb|CAA81393.1| FLT3 receptor tyrosine kinase precursor [Homo sapiens] 152 gi|6677759|ref|NP_033097.1| Rho-associated coiled-coil forming kinase 1 [Mus musculus] 153 gi|47157325|ref|NP_997704.1| protein kinase C, delta [Homo sapiens] 154 gi|50758741|ref|XP_417397.1| PREDICTED: similar to Protein phosphatase 1, regulatory subunit3D (Protein phosphatase 1, regulatory subunit 6)[gallus] 155 gi|50806296|ref|XP_428809.1| PREDICTED: similar to protein kinase C-theta, partial [Gallus] 156 gi|76678717|ref|XP_582038.2| PREDICTED: similar to protein kinase C, delta isoform 1 [Bos taurus] 157 gi|50749134|ref|XP_421499.1| PREDICTED: similar to Synaptotagmin XV (SytXV) (Chr10Syt) [Gallus gallus] 158 gi|50960708|gb|AAH75074.1| RAB11 family interacting protein 2 (class I) [Homo sapiens] 159 gi|51480470|gb|AAH80295.1| Inositol polyphosphate-5-phosphatase E [Mus musculus] 160 gi|94387687|ref|XP_984291.1| PREDICTED: similar to Tyrosine-protein phosphatase non-receptor type 23 [Mus musculus] 161 gi|28302348|gb|AAH46701.1| Kiaa1228-prov protein [Xenopus laevis] 162 gi|62857951|ref|NP_001016576.1| dual specificity phosphatase 12 [Xenopus tropicalis] 163 gi|50747824|ref|XP_421003.1| PREDICTED: similar to PI-3-kinase, class 2, alpha polypeptide; C2-containing PI kinase; PI3K-C2alpha [Gallus gallus] 164 gi|73982206|ref|XP_858534.1| PREDICTED: similar to Homeodomain-interacting kinase 3 (Androgen receptor-interacting nuclear kinase) (ANPK) isoform 3 165 gi|9837361|gb|AAG00544.1| c-ret [Xenopus laevis] 166 gi|76659739|ref|XP_881754.1| PREDICTED: similar to Phosphorylase b kinase alpha regulatory chain, liver isoform, isoform 8 [Bos taurus] 167 gi|7019543|ref|NP_037365.1| serine threonine kinase 39 (STE20/SPS1 homolog, yeast) [Homo sapiens] 168 gi|47013803|gb|AAT08447.1| putative serine/threonine kinase SADA alpha [Mus musculus] 169 gi|82957636|ref|XP_900013.1| PREDICTED: similar to SET binding factor 1 isoform a isoform 2 [Mus musculus] 170 gi|73976500|ref|XP_532491.2| PREDICTED: similar to serine/threonine kinase 31 isoform a [Canis 171 gi|80478339|gb|AAI09289.1| PIB5PA protein [Homo sapiens] 172 gi|55628888|ref|XP_519200.1| PREDICTED: similar to cyclin-dependent kinase 6 [Pan troglodytes] 173 gi|56800083|emb|CAI35137.1| myotubularin related protein 4 [Mus musculus Protease/peptidase/ubiquitin 174 gi|89273989|emb|CAJ81509.1| novel C3HC4 type (RING finger) and B-box zinc finger proteinwith SPRY domain [Xenopus tropicalis] 175 gi|50312666|ref|NP_037528.3| ubiquitin specific protease 25 [Homo sapiens] 176 gi|23110955|ref|NP_004381.2| cathepsin H isoform a preproprotein [Homo sapiens] 177 gi|20514780|ref|NP_064557.1| signal peptide peptidase-like 2B isoform 1 [Homo sapiens] 178 gi|56206692|emb|CAI24530.1| proteasome (prosome, macropain) activator subunit 4 [Mus musculus] 179 gi|62859017|ref|NP_001016233.1| dipeptidylpeptidase 4 (CD26, adenosine deaminase complexing protein[Xenopus tropocalis] 180 gi|94395826|ref|XP_990253.1| PREDICTED: similar to NEDD4-like ubiquitin-protein ligase 1 isoform3 [Mus musculus] 181 gi|32698744|ref|NP_065986.1| ubiquitin specific protease 37 [Homo sapiens] 182 gi|56556518|gb|AAH87770.1| Cathepsin S [Xenopus tropicalis] 183 gi|85567147|gb|AAI12077.1| Carboxypeptidase O [Homo sapiens] 184 gi|73956582|ref|XP_848890.1| PREDICTED: similar to matrix metalloproteinase 23B precursor[Canis] 185 gi|73970188|ref|XP_855134.1| PREDICTED: similar to ubiquitin specific protease 34 [Canis familiaris] 186 gi|90968580|ref|NP_001035105.1| ADAM metallopeptidase domain 19 [Xenopus tropicalis] 187 gi|9757698|dbj|BAB08216.1| embryonic serine protease-1 [Xenopus laevis] 188 gi|19343935|gb|AAH25716.1| Hepsin (transmembrane protease, serine 1) [Homo sapiens] 189 gi|31746143|emb|CAA64745.1| interphotoreceptor retinol-binding protein [Xenopus laevis] 190 gi|109094062|ref|XP_001085319.1| PREDICTED: similar to transmembrane protease, serine 6 isoform 4 [Macaca mulatta] 191 gi|3641621|dbj|BAA33370.1| gp180-carboxypeptidase D-like enzyme [Homo sapiens] 192 gi|51703436|gb|AAH80985.1| Bap1 protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 193 gi|38197242|gb|AAH61631.1| ADAM metallopeptidase with thrombaspondin type 1 motif, 7, preproprotein 194 gi|64596|emb|CAA42582.1| Factor I C3b/C4b inactivator (serine protease) [Xenopus laevis 195 gi|58476369|gb|AAH89702.1| Mpn-prov protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 196 gi|22122499|ref|NP_666139.1| secemin 2 [Mus musculus] 197 gi|62898459|dbj|BAD97169.1| F-box protein FBW7 isoform 2 variant [Homo sapiens] 198 gi|12655207|gb|AAH01462.1| Prostasin, preproprotein [Homo sapiens] 199 gi|60552068|gb|AAH91088.1| Ela2 protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 200 gi|56204413|emb|CAI19567.1| pappalysin 2 [Homo sapiens] 201 gi|91208437|ref|NP_057657.2| GEM interacting protein [Homo sapiens] 202 gi|739564041|ref|XP_536697.21| XFAM Receptor/ligand/transporter 203 gi|6166047|sp|O00555|CAC1A_HUMAN Voltage-dependent P/Q-type calcium channel alpha-1A subunit (Voltage-gated calcium channel alpha subunit Cav2.1) 204 jgi|Xentr4|474312|C_scaffold_9680000002, similar to ABC (sugar) transporters 205 gi|5420052|emb|CAB46565.1| insulin receptor precursor [Xenopu . . . 2374 0.0 206 gi|62859901|ref|NP_001017314.1| transducin (beta)-like 3 [Xenopus tropicalis]Contains WD40 repeats at N-terminus 207 gi|AAL02123.1| Slit [Xenopus laevis] 2730 0.0 208 gi|73982732|ref|XP_540639.2| PREDICTED: similar to olfactory . . . 234 3e−60 209 gi|472860|gb|AAA72368.1| [Human gas1 gene, complete cds.], gene product 210 gi|109102443|ref|XP_001098298.1| PREDICTED: similar to solute carrier family 4 (anion exchanger) 211 gi|14348864|gb|AAK61350.1| G-protein gamma 3 subunit [Danio rerio] 212 gi|7657269|ref|NR_055847.1| androgen-induced prostate proliferative shutoff associated protein[Hs] 213 gi|89271944|emb|CAJ81766.1| solute carrier family 25 (mitochondrial deoxynucleotide carrier)[tropocalis] 214 gi|109089131|ref|XP_001086301.1| PREDICTED: similar to retina specific protein PAL [Macaca mulatta] 215 gi|50750481|ref|XP_422014.1| PREDICTED: similar to glycoprotein receptor gp330/megalin precursor[gallus] 216 gi|50752717|ref|XP_413725.1| PREDICTED: similar to Shb-like adapter protein, Shf - human [Gallus 217 gi|109125620|ref|XP_001115790.1| PREDICTED: similar to sialic acid binding Ig-like lectin 11 isoform1 [Macaca mulatta] 218 gi|135824|sp|P25324|THTR_CHICK Thiosulfate sulfurtransferase (Rhodanese) 219 gi|109484933|ref|XP_001053933.1| PREDICTED: similar to Pygopus homolog 1 [Rattus norvegicus] 220 gi|12656588|gb|AAK00944.1| ephrin-A6 [Gallus gallus] 221 gi|57113957|ref|NP_001009040.1| sialic acid binding immunoglobulin-like lectin-like protein 1 [Pan troglodytes] 222 gi|56203902|emb|CAI23320.1| CRSP3 [Homo sapiens] 223 gi|5080756|gb|AAD39266.1| Human Fc gamma BP [AA 1-2843] [Homo sapiens] 224 gi|28804497|dbj|BAC58037.1| neurapilin-2 [Gallus gallus] 225 jgi|Xentr4|140725|gw1.81.173.1. Muc4/X apomucin [Homo sapiens] 226 gi|1617590|gb|AAC09469.1| prostaglandin transporter hPGT [Homo sapiens] 227 gi|6625782|gb|AAF19395.1| adrenal hyoplasia protein DAX1 [Gallus gallus] 228 jgi|Xentr4|171969|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_243000002, 96% identical to somatodomain of gi|214288|gb|AAA70330.1| insulin-like growth factor 229 jgi|Xentr4|177538|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_391000010. glutamate receptor 7[Hs] 230 gi|61743980|ref|NP_060034.9| stabilin 2 precursor [Homo sapiens] 231 gi|50730689|ref|XP_425598.1| PREDICTED: similar to Protocadherin 9 precursor [Gallus gallus] 232 gi|51093859|ref|NP_001003406.1| voltage-dependent T-type calcium channel alpha-1| subunit isoformb [Homo sapiens] 233 gi|73965429|ref|XP_548020.2| PREDICTED: similar to ATP-binding cassette, sub-family A member8 [Canis familiaris] 234 gi|46275830|ref|NP_079455.2| plexin A2 [Homo sapiens] 235 gi|110624748|tpe|CAJ77883.1| TPA: contactin-associated protein 5 [Gallus gallus] 236 gi|13242243|ref|NP_077331.1| axin2 [Rattus norvegicus] 237 gi|19923084|ref|NP_612152.1| polycystin-1L1 [Homo sapiens] 238 gi|60686898|gb|AAX35539.1| nephrin [Xenopus laevis] 239 gi|46329875|gb|AAH68518.1| Potassium channel tetramerisation domain containing 9 [Homo sapiens] 240 gi|50766284|ref|XP_426904.1| PREDICTED: similar to Transmembrane 4 superfamily member 2, CD231[gallus] 241 gi|45360939|ref|NP_988864.1| nodal-related protein 3-B [Xenopus tropicalis] 242 gi|31657114|ref|NP_060546.2| armadillo repeat containing 4 [Homo sapiens 243 gi|109478813|ref|XP_234725.4| PREDICTED: similar to Multidrug resistance protein 1 (P-glycoprotein1) (CD243 antigen) [Rattus norvegicus] 244 gi|974710|gb|AAA93526.1| Eph receptor tyrosine kinase[X. laevis] 245 gi|91064872|ref|NP_766497.3| scavenger receptor cysteine-rich type 1 protein CD163c-alpha 246 gi|88954203|ref|XP_932263.1| PREDICTED: similar to protocadherin 15b [Homo sapiens] 247 gi|109116541|ref|XP_001116053.1| PREDICTED: similar to mannose receptor, C type 2 [Macaca mulatta] 248 gi|17530177|gb|AAL40734.1| N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor 3A [Homo sapiens] 249 gi|50732549|ref|XP_418688.1| PREDICTED: similar to Wnt inhibitory factor 1 precursor (WIF-1)[gallus] 250 gi|2289346|gb|AAB64441.1| transforming growth factor-beta5 [Xenopus laevis] 251 gi|54145370|gb|AAV31038.1| R-spondin 3 [Xenopus tropicalis] 252 gi|54037947|gb|AAH84178.1| Translocase of inner mitochondrial membrane 23 homolog [Xenopus 253 gi|62899035|ref|NP_001017420.1| establishment of cohesion 1 homolog 2 [Homo sapiens] 254 gi|5081595|gb|AAD39458.1| putative surface-exposed virulence protein BigA [Salmonella typhimurium] 255 gi|68355932|ref|XP_691807.1| PREDICTED: similar to Small conductance calcium-activated potassium channel protein 2 (SK2) [Danio rerio] 256 gi|73954230|ref|XP_546320.2| PREDICTED: similar to chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan 4 [Canis familiaris] 257 gi|110287952|sp|Q5DTL9|S4A10_MOUSE Sodium-driven chloride bicarbonate exchanger (Solute carrier family 4 member 10) 258 gi|961515|dbj|BAA07374.1| plexin [Xenopus laevis] 259 gi|27372087|gb|AAN87848.1| adenosine receptor 2B [Gallus gallus] 260 gi|33577859|emb|CAE35124.1| exogenous ferric siderophore receptor [Bordetella bronchiseptica RB50] 261 gi|68245352|gb|EAN27479.1| Acriflavin resistance protein [Magnetococcus sp. MC-1] 262 gi|62859147|ref|NP_001016182.1| ATPase, H+ transporting, lysosomal, V1 subunit H [Xenopus tropicalis] 263 jgi|Xentr4|11552|gw1.190.47.1, 38% similar to putative Xenopus laevis pheromone receptor 264 gi|3851060|gb|AAC72196.1| interleukin-18 receptor accessory protein-like [Homo sapiens] 265 gi|14548162|sp|Q13224|NMDE2_HUMAN Glutamate [NMDA] receptor subunit epsilon 2 precursor 266 gi|36953836|gb|AAQ86961.1| neural interleukin 16 precursor protein [Homo sapiens] 267 gi|47577637|ref|NP_001001053.1| olfactory receptor Olr545 [Rattus norvegicus] 268 jgi|Xentr4|173031|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_267000033, 55% gi|27651991|gb|AAN86530.1| Na+-coupled citrate transporter protein [Homo sapiens] 269 gi|2605945|gb|AAB84215.1| Jagged2 [Homo sapiens] 270 gi|3929529|gb|AAC82612.1| intrinsic factor-B12 receptor precursor; cubilin [Homo sapiens] 271 gi|24497438|ref|NP_002178.2| interleukin 12B precursor [Homo sapiens] 272 gi|18860924|gb|AAK31202.2| channel-kinase 2 [Homo sapiens] 273 gi|55663532|emb|CAH72302.1| major histocompatibility complex, class I-related [Homo sapiens] 274 gi|8927560|gb|AAF82116.1| glucose transporter 3 [Homo sapiens] 275 gi|266666|sp|P30531|SC6A1_HUMAN Sodium- and chloride-dependent GABA transporter 1 276 jgi|Xentr4|190336|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_1286000002. Olfactory receptor II 277 gi|68390626|ref|XP_685124.1| PREDICTED: similar to putative pheromone receptor CPpr10 278 gi|49901371|gb|AAH76581.1| Opioid binding protein/cell adhesion molecule-like [Mus musculus] 279 gi|10436051|gb|AAG16773.1| sodium bicarbonate cotransporter 2b [Homo sapiens] 280 gi|2290526|gb|AAB65150.1| Na—(K)—Cl cotransporter isoform mBSC1-F9 [Mus musculus] 281 gi|62897377|dbj|BAD96629.1| G protein-coupled receptor family C, group 5, member C isoform[Hs] 282 gi|27469599|gb|AAH42083.1| Transmembrane and tetratricopeptide repeat containing 1 [Hs] 283 gi|76631976|ref|XP_870184.1| PREDICTED: similar to low density lipoprotein receptor-related[Bos taurus] 284 gi|34597338|gb|AAQ77244.1| growth factor receptor-bound protein 10 [Gallus gallus] 285 gi|45594310|ref|NP_110503.3| olfactory receptor, family 5, subfamily V, member 1 [Homo sapiens] 286 gi|7414316|emb|CAB86192.1| calcium channel, alpha 2/delta subunit 2 [Homo sapiens] 287 gi|50740839|ref|XP_426139.1| PREDICTED: similar to Opsin 3 (Encephalopsin) (Panopsin) [Gallus] 288 gi|50755827|ref|XP_425239.1| PREDICTED: similar to Chemokine receptor-like 1 (G-protein coupledreceptor DEZ) (G protein-coupled receptor ChemR23) 289 gi|73977767|ref|XP_532674.2| PREDICTED: similar to Host cell factor 2 (HCF-2) (C2 factor)isoform 1 [Canis familiaris] 290 gi|89111458|dbj|BAE80391.1| bitter taste receptor [Xenopus tropicalis] G-protein coupled receptor 291 gi|55166590|dbj|BAD67422.1| Toll-like receptor 1 [Gallus gallus] 292 gi|13562153|gb|AAK19738.2| channel-kinase 1 [Homo sapiens] 293 gi|109496388|ref|XP_001065879.1| PREDICTED: similar to putative pheromone receptor (Go-VN5) [Rattus 294 gi|68370672|ref|XP_698068.1| PREDICTED: similar to amiloride-sensitive cation channel 3 [Danio rerio] 295 gi|46091167|dbj|BAD13712.1| putative pheromone receptor [Xenopus laevis] 296 gi|63548771|ref|XP_487960.2| PREDICTED: similar to vomeronasal 2, receptor, 1b [Mus musculus] 297 gi|47678174|emb|CAF31506.1| Toll-like-receptor [Oncorhynchus mykiss] 298 gi|109494927|ref|XP_221799.4| PREDICTED: similar to putative pheromone receptor (Go-VN5) [Rattus norvegicus] 299 gi|16758504|ref|NP_446138.1| transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily 5, member 6 [Rattus norvegicus] 300 gi|76670117|ref|XP_606061.2| PREDICTED: similar to protein tyrosine phosphatase, receptor type, J precursor, partial [Bos taurus] 301 gi|50729383|ref|XP_416491.1| PREDICTED: similar to Extracellular calcium-sensing receptor precursor (CaSR) 302 gi|38174096|gb|AAH61378.1| Purinergic receptor P2Y, G-protein coupled, 2 [Xenopus tropicalis] 303 gi|58331919|ref|NP_001011067.1| chemokine (C—X—C motif) receptor 3 [Xenopus tropicalis] 304 gi|50754371|ref|XP_414354.1| PREDICTED: similar to cadherin EGF LAG seven-pass G-type receptor 3; multiple EGF-like domains 2 305 gi|45384454|ref|NP_990301.1| insulin-like growth factor 2 receptor [Gallus gallus] 306 gi|33329181|gb|AAQ09991.1| mu opioid-like receptor [Rana pipiens] 307 gi|16306530|ref|NP_006718.2| cadherin 10, type 2 preproprotein [Homo sapiens] 308 gi|54290076|dbj|BAD61046.1| peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor-gamma co-activator-1 [Gallus gallus] 309 gi|53726803|ref|ZP_00347694.1| COG2072: predicted flavoprotein involved in K+ transport [Pseudomonas aeruginosa UCBPP-PA14] 310 gi|22296880|ref|NP_065647.1| cytokine-like protein 2-21 [Mus musculus] 311 jgi|Xentr4|20767|gw1.22.13.1, 59% identical to developmentally regulated protein TPO1 312 jgi|Xentr4|99543|gw1.235.135.1, similar to parathyroid hormone 313 jgi|Xentr4|100164|gw1.1441.2.1, 44% identical to EGFR 314 gi|82592659|sp|Q8WV28|BLNK_HUMAN B-cell linker protein (Cytoplasmic adapter protein) (SLP-65) 315 gi|4759092|ref|NP_004627.1| semaphorin 3B isoform 1 precursor [Homo sapiens] 316 gi|93140549|sp|Q9UIW2|PLXA1_HUMAN Plexin-A1 precursor (Semaphorin receptor NOV) 317 gi|9857005|emb|CAC04078.1| adenylyl cyclase type V [Gallus gallus] 318 gi|8923894|ref|NP_061146.1| thrombospondin type I domain-containing 1 isoform 1 [Homo sapiens] 319 gi|27436940|ref|NP_774959.1| reelin isoform b [Homo sapiens] . . . 4653 0.0 320 gi|106889499|ref|ZP_01356698.1| Integrins alpha chain [Roseiflexus sp. RS-1] 321 gi|1351243|sp|P47749|PAR1_XENLA Proteinase-activated receptor . . . 569 7e−161 322 gi|18203758|gb|AAH21636.1| Hyaluronidase 1 [Mus musculus] >gi . . . 345 2e−93 323 gi|115445|sp|P15907|SIAT1_HUMAN CMP-N-acetylneuraminate-beta- . . . 339 1e−91 324 gi|73995362|ref|XP_543447.2| PREDICTED: similar to Chemokine . . . 166 8e−40 Membrane/trafficking 325 gi|56118738|ref|NP_001007879.1| sytl2 protein [Xenopus tropic . . . 326 ref|NP_989112.1| exportin 5 [Xenopus tropicalis] >emb|CAE5120 . . . 327 gi|89271926|emb|CAJ83698.1| golgi phosphoprotein 3-like [Xenopus tropicalis] 328 gi|475062|emb|CAA53977.1| VIP36 (vesicular integral-membrane protein) [Canis familiaris] 329 gi|73998365|ref|XP_543987.2| PREDICTED: similar to Golgi-specific brefeldin A-resistance guanine nucleotide exchange factor 1 (BFA-resistant GEF 1) isoform 1 330 gi|12230752|sp|P57737|CORO7_HUMAN Coronin-7 (70 kDa WD repeat tumor rejection antigen homolog) 331 gi|56204228|emb|CAI22824.1| phosphodiesterase 4D interacting protein (myomegalin) [Homo sapiens] 332 gi|11641245|ref|NP_071737.1| kinesin family member 9 isoform 1 [Homo sapiens] 333 gi|56417899|gb|AAV90838.1| ARF-binding protein 1 [Homo sapiens] 334 gi|109112872|ref|XP_001117725.1| PREDICTED: similar to spinster-like [Macaca mulatta] 335 gi|74005606|ref|XP_536032.2| PREDICTED: similar to Alsin (Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis protein 2) [Canis familiaris] 336 gi|74354408|gb|AAI04391.1| RAB33A, member of RAS oncogene family [Mus musculus] 337 gi|62896865|dbj|BAD96373.1| dynein light chain-A variant [Homo sapiens] 338 gi|20137304|sp|P58742|AAAS_MOUSE Aladin (Adracalin) 339 jgi|Xentr4|146472|fgenesh1_kg.C_scaffold_1000028, 57% identical to Eps15 [Hs] 340 jgi|Xentr4|166735|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_140000033highly similar to dynein heavy chain except for the ˜400 N-terminus 341 jgi|Xentr4|172007|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_243000040, similar to BRCC3/DEPDC (pleckstrin/G protein interacting and RhoGAP domains) 342 gi|9957467|gb|AAG09372.1| ATP-binding cassette sub-family A member 2 [Homo sapiens] 343 gi|76646927|ref|XP_605840.2| PREDICTED: similar to mannosidase, alpha, class 2A 344 gi|73993539|ref|XP_534539.2| PREDICTED: similar to Tetratricopeptide repeat protein 10 (TPR repeat protein 10) 345 gi|46397431|sp|Q9H4G4|GAPR1_HUMAN Golgi-associated plant pathogenesis-related protein 1 (Golgi-associated PR-1 protein) (GAPR-1) 346 gi|974734|dbj|BAA10017.1| golgi alpha-mannosidaseII [Homo sapiens] 347 jgi|Xentr4|11016|gw1.441.4.1, 65% identical to otopetrin 1 348 gi|57015325|sp|Q9Y6U3|ADSV_HUMAN Adseverin (Scinderin) 349 gi|40850908|gb|AAH65220.1| PACS1L protein [Homo sapiens] Additional poorly characterized or uncharacterized proteins 350 gi|37606093|emb|CAE49238.1| novel protein similar to human histamine receptor H3 (HRH3) [Danio] 351 jgi|Xentr4|164679|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_107000040, only partial similarity to some proteins[Hs] 352 jgi|Xentr4|165369|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_117000037, low level of homology to some novel proteins and diaphanous 353 gi|56208005|emb|CAI20670.1| novel protein similar to vertebrate scavenger receptor protein 354 jgi|Xentr4|176410|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_356000039, similar to a portion of scavenger receptor 355 jgi|Xentr4|188610|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_1006000002, only partial similarity to some proteins [Hs] 356 gi|83776553|ref|NP_001032967.1| nuclear localized protein 1 isoform c [Mus musculus] 357 gi|47123176|gb|AAH70822.1| MGC83907 protein [Xenopus laevis] 358 gi|50415278|gb|AAH77467.1| MGC82459 protein [Xenopus laevis] 359 gi|31982474|ref|NP_031669.2| CD36 antigen [Mus musculus] 360 gi|58532587|ref|NP_001002860.2| BTB (POZ) domain containing 7 isoform 1 [Homo sapiens] 361 gi|51262158|gb|AAH79925.1| MGC79485 protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 362 gi|47124798|gb|AAH70789.1| Unknown (protein for MGC: 83834) [Xenopus laevis] 363 gi|62860046|ref|NP_115519.2| zinc finger, RAN-binding domain containing 3 [Homo sapiens] 364 gi|47717994|gb|AAH71043.1| MGC82326 protein [Xenopus laevis] 365 gi|71896983|ref|NP_001026499.1| hypothetical protein LOC425070 [Gallus gallus] 366 gi|14041976|dbj|BAB55057.1| unnamed protein product [Homo sapiens] 367 gi|55962286|emb|CAI15307.1| novel protein (FLJ36760) [Homo sapiens] 368 gi|47939796|gb|AAH72259.1| MGC82368 protein [Xenopus laevis] 369 gi|54038535|gb|AAH84630.1| LOC495219 protein [Xenopus laevis] Length = 1090 370 gi|40789028|dbj|BAA82994.2| KIAA1042 protein [Homo sapiens] Length = 1019 371 gi|76634267|ref|XP_601209.2| PREDICTED: similar to two AAA domain containing protein isoform 1 [Bos taurus] 372 gi|54038650|gb|AAH84201.1| LOC495051 protein [Xenopus laevis] 373 gi|94367385|ref|XP_283804.6| PREDICTED: hypothetical protein LOC320706 [Mus musculus] 374 gi|80476431|gb|AAI08566.1| Unknown (protein for MGC: 131046) [Xenopus laevis] 375 gi|89268265|emb|CAJ83839.1| novel protein containing a Cyclin, N-terminal domain [Xenopus tropicalis] 376 gi|40675343|gb|AAH64876.1| LOC395025 protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 377 gi|47217481|emb|CAG10250.1| unnamed protein product [Tetraodon nigroviridis] 378 gi|56118929|ref|NP_001008022.1| MGC79514 protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 379 gi|49904097|gb|AAH76821.1| MGC83808 protein [Xenopus laevis] 380 gi|54035113|gb|AAH84099.1| LOC495012 protein [Xenopus laevis] 381 gi|89269057|emb|CAJ83528.1| MARVEL domain containing 3 [Xenopus tropicalis] 382 gi|73955182|ref|XP_546537.2| PREDICTED: similar to KDEL (Lys-Asp-Glu-Leu) containing 2 [Canis familiaris] 383 gi|50603924|gb|AAH77330.1| MGC80308 protein [Xenopus laevis] 384 gi|47939986|gb|AAH72280.1| MGC82419 protein [Xenopus laevis] 385 gi|62859955|ref|NP_001016662.1| hypothetical protein LOC549416 [Xenopus tropicalis] 386 gi|28972393|dbj|BAC65650.1| mKIAA0769 protein [Mus musculus] 387 gi|73989044|ref|XP_848634.1| PREDICTED: similar to F11C1.5a isoform 3 [Canis familiaris] 388 gi|89272062|emb|CAJ82603.1| novel zinc finger protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 389 gi|89267379|emb|CAJ83058.1| novel zinc finger protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 390 gi|1345408|dbj|BAA05046.1| AT motif-binding factor [Mus musculus] 391 gi|109122470|ref|XP_001083133.1| PREDICTED: similar to F-box protein 15 isoform 3 [Macaca mulatta] 392 gi|73971950|ref|XP_532030.2| PREDICTED: similar to sushi, von Willebrand factor type A, EGF and pentraxin domain containing 1 [Canis familiaris] 393 gi|72113867|ref|XP_786668.1| PREDICTED: similar to WD repeat domain 49 [Strongylocentrotus purpuratus] 394 gi|57164405|ref|NP_203752.1| TPR domain, ankyrin-repeat and coiled-coil-containing [Homo sapiens] 395 gi|55665842|emb|CAH71229.1| pleckstrin homology domain containing, family A member 6 [Hs] 396 gi|109100002|ref|XP_001096248.1| PREDICTED: similar to tetratricopeptide repeat domain 21B [Macaca mulatta] 397 gi|74001797|ref|XP_859566.1| PREDICTED: similar to WD repeat and FYVE domain containing 3 isoform 1 isoform 3 [Canis familiaris] 398 gi|109111906|ref|XP_001104352.1| PREDICTED: similar to RAS and EF hand domain containing [Macaca mulatta] 399 jgi|Xentr4|71370|gw1.1505.36.1, ˜40% identical to some hypothetical proteins in human and mouse, which may be protein or peptide transporter 400 jgi|Xentr4|127800|gw1.791.71.1 401 gi|56206158|emb|CAI22467.1| novel protein [Homo sapiens] 402 gi|16041846|gb|AAH15814.1| KIAA1799 protein [Homo sapiens] 403 gi|34783490|gb|AAH36549.2| Hypothetical protein DKFZp761N1114 [Homo sapiens] 404 jgi|Xentr4|163315|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_90000068, no significant hits found 405 gi|89028476|ref|XP_941673.1| PREDICTED: similar to W03G1.5 [Homo sapiens] 406 jgi|Xentr4|166586|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_138000003, only partial similarity to Ca dependent kinase ID?[Hs] 407 gi|12653287|gb|AAH00412.1| CCDC106 protein [Homo sapiens] 408 gi|83523748|ref|NP_115556.1| hypothetical protein LOC84140 [Homo sapiens] 409 gi|15706422|emb|CAC69885.1| putative DNA binding protein [Homo sapiens] 410 jgi|Xentr4|192443|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_2547000002, similar to some enzymes that are shorter in length 411 gi|89267382|emb|CAJ82347.1| novel protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 412 gi|61676211|ref|NP_001012978.1| RP11-506B15.1 protein isoform 1 [Homo sapiens] 413 gi|50604012|gb|AAH78000.1| MGC82413 protein [Xenopus laevis] 414 gi|74000443|ref|XP_544657.2| PREDICTED: similar to CG13531-PB [Canis familiaris] 415 gi|89028623|ref|XP_945851.1| PREDICTED: similar to CG6903-PA [Homo sapiens] 416 gi|56788947|gb|AAH88717.1| LOC496246 protein [Xenopus laevis] 417 gi|73962244|ref|XP_547693.2| PREDICTED: similar to Protein KIAA0427 [Canis familiaris] 418 gi|21739302|emb|CAD38698.1| hypothetical protein [Homo sapiens] 419 gi|38014646|gb|AAH60390.1| LOC398902 protein [Xenopus laevis] similar to USP36 420 gi|109658612|gb|AAI17420.1| MEGF11 protein [Homo sapiens] 421 gi|49115913|gb|AAH73645.1| MGC82982 protein [Xenopus laevis] 422 gi|62858313|ref|NP_001017146.1| hypothetical protein LOC549900 [Xenopus tropicalis] 423 gi|47122892|gb|AAH70564.1| MGC80013 protein [Xenopus laevis] 424 gi|89272757|emb|CAJ82522.1| Novel protein containing SPRY domain [Xenopus tropicalis] 425 gi|50414969|gb|AAH77873.1| MGC80621 protein [Xenopus laevis] Length = 715 426 gi|73951775|ref|XP_853166.1| PREDICTED: similar to Protein C4orf008 homolog [Canis familiaris] 427 gi|52354693|gb|AAH82955.1| LOC494812 protein [Xenopus laevis] 428 gi|28703992|gb|AAH47428.1| UBX domain containing 3 [Homo sapiens] 429 gi|54038035|gb|AAH84284.1| LOC495109 protein [Xenopus laevis] 430 gi|47939821|gb|AAH72302.1| LOC432183 protein [Xenopus laevis] 431 gi|49115232|gb|AAH73241.1| MGC80584 protein [Xenopus laevis] 432 gi|74353422|gb|AAI03738.1| Unknown (protein for MGC: 115245) [Xenopus laevis] 433 gi|89272034|emb|CAJ82894.1| Novel protein similar to PHD finger protein 6 [Xenopus tropicalis] 434 gi|49117984|gb|AAH72918.1| MGC80389 protein [Xenopus laevis] 435 gi|109075862|ref|XP_001094345.1|PREDICTED: similar to zinc finger protein 59 [Macaca mulatta] 436 gi|52354822|gb|AAH82896.1| LOC494781 protein [Xenopus laevis] 437 gi|76639401|ref|XP_603591.2| PREDICTED: similar to CG9164-PA, isoform A [Bos taurus] 438 gi|37590279|gb|AAH59306.1| MGC68967 protein [Xenopus laevis] 439 gi|50927466|gb|AAH79785.1| LOC446272 protein [Xenopus laevis] 440 gi|89273989|emb|CAJ81509.1| novel C3HC4 type (RING finger) and B-box zinc finger protein with SPRY domain [Xenopus tropicalis] 441 gi|57870656|gb|AAH89068.1| LOC548351 protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 442 gi|68440719|ref|XP_694474.1| PREDICTED: similar to CG3307-PA, isoform A 443 gi|109103222|ref|XP_001094617.1| PREDICTED: similar to archipelago CG15010-PC, isoform C 444 gi|89057109|ref|XP_945520.1| PREDICTED: similar to Protein KIAA1543 [Homo sapiens] 445 gi|52354691|gb|AAH82954.1| LOC494811 protein [Xenopus laevis] 446 gi|73957395|ref|XP_853024.1| PREDICTED: similar to ring finger and WD repeat domain 3 [Canis] 447 gi|68438167|ref|XP_693318.1| PREDICTED: similar to Probable endonuclease KIAA0830 precursor[Danio rerio] 448 gi|50748524|ref|XP_421286.1| PREDICTED: similar to RIKEN cDNA 9330187M14 [Gallus gallus] 449 gi|62858063|ref|NP_001016528.1| hypothetical protein LOC549282 [Xenopus tropicalis] 450 jgi|Xentr4|114618|gw1.676.237.1, ˜50% identical to Xenopus Zinc finger protein 451 gi|14602889|gb|AAH09941.1| Coiled-coil domain containing 102A [Homo sapiens] 452 gi|57086053|ref|XP_546395.1| PREDICTED: similar to BTB (POZ) domain containing 15 isoform 1 [Canis familiaris] 453 gi|83406123|gb|AAI11275.1| Similar to F-box/WD-repeat protein 9 (F-box and WD-40 domain protein 9) [Bos taurus] 454 jgi|Xentr4|167026|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_145000043, 45% identical to TPR repeat protein 6 455 gi|34530225|dbj|BAC85852.1| unnamed protein product [Homo sapiens] 456 gi|71894871|ref|NP_001026048.1| sterile alpha motif domain containing 11 [Gallus gallus] 457 gi|73975221|ref|XP_851124.1| PREDICTED: similar to ankyrin repeat domain protein 17 isoform 458 gi|61657905|ref|NP_795933.2| F-box and leucine-rich repeat protein 7 [Mus musculus] 459 gi|94393439|ref|XP_982445.1| PREDICTED: similar to polyglutamine-containing protein [Mus musculus] 460 gi|68432763|ref|XP_701176.1| PREDICTED: similar to fibrinogen C domain containing 1 [Danio] 461 gi|89272832|emb|CAJ83629.1| novel cytochrome P450 cyp2 family protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 462 gi|76779920|gb|AAI06315.1| Flj13912-prov protein [Xenopus laevis] 463 jgi|Xentr4|2082|gw1.1736.1.1, similar to some Hypothetical protein 464 jgi|Xentr4|32082|gw1.1039.27.1, similar to some hypothetical proteins 465 jgi|Xentr4|39741|gw1.959.48.1, similar to a human hypothetical protein DKFZp586B0319.1 466 jgi|Xentr4|43077|gw1.925.27.1, similar to some hypothetical proteins 467 jgi|Xentr4|53150|gw1.69.45.1, similar to some hypothetical proteins 468 jgi|Xentr4|54429|gw1.398.35.1, similar to some hypothetical proteins 469 jgi|Xentr4|59780|gw1.225.30.1, similar to some hypothetical proteins 470 jgi|Xentr4|69388|gw1.426.71.1, weak similarity to some hypothetical proteins 471 gi|32699050|ref|NP_872422.1| hypothetical protein LOC348110 [Homo sapiens] 472 gi|58219541|ref|NP_001010940.1| hypothetical protein LOC138255 [Homo sapiens] 473 gi|30354543|gb|AAH52300.1| Hypothetical protein LOC84985, isoform a [Homo sapiens] 474 gi|30268218|emb|CAD89916.1| hypothetical protein [Homo sapiens] 475 jgi|Xentr4|153388|fgenesh1_kg.C_scaffold_1422000001, no significant hits found in [Hs] 476 jgi|Xentr4|167122|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_147000009, similar to fragments of some proteins 477 jgi|Xentr4|169828|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_194000024, only partial similarity to some proteins 478 jgi|Xentr4|170092|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_199000040, only partial similarity to some proteins [Hs] 479 jgi|Xentr4|171732|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_237000004, only partial similarity to some proteins [Hs] 480 jgi|Xentr4|172662|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_258000012, only partial similarity to some proteins [Hs] 481 jgi|Xentr4|185476|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_737000016, no significant match 482 gi|73979386|ref|XP_851360.1| PREDICTED: hypothetical protein XP_846267 [Canis familiaris] 483 gi|47124837|gb|AAH70842.1| MGC84571 protein [Xenopus laevis] 484 gi|61097887|ref|NP_001012830.1| hypothetical protein LOC417963 [Gallus gallus] 485 gi|46329709|gb|AAH68556.1| Hypothetical protein LOC283537 [Homo sapiens] 486 gi|16877328|gb|AAH16919.1| Hypothetical protein LOC55260 [Homo sapiens] 487 gi|47209642|emb|CAF93083.1| unnamed protein product [Tetraodon nigroviridis] 488 gi|24639643|ref|NP_572154.1| CG15570-PA [Drosophila melanogaster] 489 gi|58332098|ref|NP_001011197.1| hypothetical protein MGC: 15854 [Xenopus tropicalis] 490 gi|32450345|gb|AAH54320.1| MGC64596 protein [Xenopus laevis] 491 gi|109096623|ref|XP_001103073.1| PREDICTED: similar to CG32133-PA [Macaca mulatta] 492 gi|50791195|ref|XP_427855.1| PREDICTED: similar to p87, partial [Gallus gallus] 493 gi|52354808|gb|AAH82853.1| Unknown (protein for MGC: 81676) [Xenopus laevis] Length = 619 494 gi|49648437|emb|CAG80757.1| unnamed protein product [Yarrowia lipolytica CLIB122] 495 gi|73945956|ref|XP_853234.1| PREDICTED: hypothetical protein XP_848141 [Canis familiaris] 496 gi|47077475|dbj|BAD18625.1| unnamed protein product [Homo sapiens] 497 gi|33417142|gb|AAH56082.1| MGC69074 protein [Xenopus laevis] 498 gi|89272743|emb|CAJ83032.1| novel protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 499 gi|59807586|gb|AAH90099.1| LOC548392 protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 500 gi|55250537|gb|AAH86281.1| LOC397707 protein [Xenopus laevis] 501 gi|74226934|dbj|BAE27110.1| unnamed protein product [Mus musculus] 502 gi|109072111|ref|XP_001101145.1| PREDICTED: similar to CG14803-PA [Macaca mulatta] 503 gi|46250116|gb|AAH68783.1| MGC81324 protein [Xenopus laevis] 504 gi|47938698|gb|AAH72310.1| MGC82616 protein [Xenopus laevis] 505 gi|62185744|gb|AAH92243.1| Unknown (protein for MGC: 99018) [Xenopus laevis] 506 gi|40675671|gb|AAH64871.1| Downstream neighbor of SON [Xenopus tropicalis] 507 gi|46250092|gb|AAH68727.1| MGC81180 protein [Xenopus laevis] 508 gi|76629253|ref|XP_612034.2| PREDICTED: hypothetical protein XP_612034 [Bos taurus] 509 gi|46250179|gb|AAH68960.1| LOC414497 protein [Xenopus laevis] 510 gi|89271838|emb|CAJ82040.1| novel protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 511 gi|50755769|ref|XP_414893.1| PREDICTED: similar to zinc finger CCCH type domain containing 512 gi|90017451|ref|NP_001034832.1| hypothetical protein LOC594887 [Xenopus tropicalis] 513 gi|109073351|ref|XP_001099687.1| PREDICTED: hypothetical protein [Macaca mulatta] 514 gi|109508870|ref|XP_001077135.1| PREDICTED: similar to CG13731-PA [Rattus norvegicus] 515 gi|88944429|ref|XP_941412.1| PREDICTED: hypothetical protein XP_941412 [Homo sapiens] 516 gi|51590260|emb|CAH21897.1| conserved hypothetical protein [Yersinia pseudotuberculosis IP 32953] 517 gi|20988852|gb|AAH30281.1| FLJ21438 protein [Homo sapiens] 518 gi|72159021|ref|XP_790696.1| PREDICTED: similar to putative cytoplasmic protein of eukaryotic origin (5S122) [Strongylocentrotus purpuratus] 519 gi|50796078|ref|XP_430539.1| PREDICTED: hypothetical protein XP_430539, partial [Gallus gallus] 520 jgi|Xentr4|475498|fgenesh1_Sanger_cdna.C_scaffold_41000011 521 gi|91087047|ref|XP_974545.1| PREDICTED: similar to CG14748-PA [Tribolium castaneum] 522 gi|68363444|ref|XP_694453.1| PREDICTED: hypothetical protein XP_689361 [Danio rerio] 523 gi|109078083|ref|XP_001090273.1| PREDICTED: similar to ankyrin repeat domain 32 [Macaca mulatta] 524 gi|50751174|ref|XP_422291.1| PREDICTED: similar to chromosome 1 open reading frame 19 [Gallus 525 gi|38174221|gb|AAH61422.1| WD repeat domain 40B [Xenopus tropicalis] 526 jgi|Xentr4|193897|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_7962000001 527 gi|89272518|emb|CAJ83583.1| ring finger protein 127 [Xenopus tropicalis] 528 gi|49523263|gb|AAH75434.1| Zinc finger protein 384 [Xenopus tropicalis] 529 gi|7662014|ref|NP_055560.1| family with sequence similarity 38, member A [Homo sapiens] 530 gi|58743367|ref|NP_620137.1| FCH domain only 2 [Homo sapiens] 531 gi|92110053|ref|NP_443128.2| CUB and Sushi multiple domains 2 [Homo sapiens] 532 gi|18044835|gb|AAH20030.1| Arhgef16 protein [Mus musculus] 533 gi|73973888|ref|XP_539029.2| PREDICTED: similar to Zinc finger protein 292 [Canis familiaris 534 gi|58036504|ref|NP_067047.3| zinc finger protein 462 [Homo sapiens] 535 gi|73948548|ref|XP_541718.2| PREDICTED: similar to zinc finger protein 507 [Canis familiaris] 536 gi|37589967|gb|AAH21842.2| Sushi domain containing 4 [Mus musculus] Length = 492 537 jgi|Xentr4|112257|gw1.481.102.1, 78% identical to E1B-55 kDa-associated protein 5 isoform b [Bos taurus] 538 gi|38679905|ref|NP_775818.2| tripartite motif-containing 65 [Homo sapiens] 539 gi|34222279|ref|NP_115507.3| armadillo repeat containing 2 [Homo sapiens] 540 gi|71895541|ref|NP_001026217.1| G patch domain containing 2 [Gallus gallus] 541 gi|57530823|ref|NP_001006576.1| DEP domain containing 1B [Gallus gallus] 542 gi|71274148|ref|NP_001025055.1| pleckstrin homology domain containing, family G (with RhoGefdomain) member 1 [Homo sapiens] 543 gi|62088386|dbj|BAD92640.1| iron-responsive element binding protein 2 variant [Homo sapiens] 544 gi|76563940|ref|NP_005451.2| synuclein alpha interacting protein (synphilin) [Homo sapiens] 545 gi|4503761|ref|NP_001452.1| flavin containing monooxygenase 5 [Homo sapiens] 546 gi|84993742|ref|NP_001034200.1| abnormal cell LINeage LIN-41 [Homo sapiens] 547 gi|42556040|gb|AAS19709.1| prominin 1 isoform s7 [Homo sapiens] 548 gi|55777297|gb|AAH46335.1| Stard10 protein [Mus musculus] 549 gi|28380074|sp|Q8WZ60|KLHL6_HUMAN Kelch-like protein 6 550 gi|55741849|ref|NP_003852.1| Breakpoint cluster region protein, uterine leiomyoma, 2 [Homo sapiens] 551 gi|55749758|ref|NP_775873.2| DIP2 disco-interacting protein 2 homolog B [Homo sapiens] 552 gi|109492216|ref|XP_001081676.1| PREDICTED: similar to Usher syndrome 1G homolog [Rattus norvegicus] 553 gi|75516747|gb|AAI01729.1| Transmembrane protein 1 [Homo sapiens] 554 gi|62858055|ref|NP_001016532.1| transmembrane protein 34 [Xenopus tropicalis] 555 gi|73963950|ref|XP_547829.2| PREDICTED: similar to Protein C14orf101 [Canis familiaris] 556 gi|39645626|gb|AAH63791.1| Tetratricopeptide repeat domain 27 [Homo sapiens] 557 gi|89056750|ref|XP_372723.3| PREDICTED: similar to Nucleoside diphosphate-linked moiety X 558 gi|76628386|ref|XP_582205.2| PREDICTED: similar to Paraneoplastic antigen Ma1 (Neuron- and testis-specific protein 1) (37 kDa neuronal protein) [Bos taurus] 559 gi|56789356|gb|AAH86498.2| Sgne1-prov protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 560 jgi|Xentr4|60141|gw1.132.59.1, 68% identical to Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor 10 [Homo sapiens] 561 jgi|Xentr4|61907|gw1.392.34.1, similar to elastase 562 jgi|Xentr4|112119|gw1.24.729.1, 78% identical to rTS beta protein [Hs] 563 jgi|Xentr4|141691|gw1.84.192.1, 78% identical to rTS beta protein [Hs] 564 jgi|Xentr4|146626|fgenesh1_kg.C_scaffold_5000010, 67-80% identical to L8, a protein overexpressed in small lung cancer [Hs] 565 gi|13325075|ref|NP_002817.2| quiescin Q6 isoform a [Homo sapiens] 566 gi|138529|sp|P09327|VILI_HUMAN Villin-1 567 gi|180119|gb|AAA68482.1| lymphocyte differentiation antigen CD38 568 gi|25470890|ref|NP_733829.1| DAZ associated protein 1 isoform a [Homo sapiens] 569 gi|30841528|gb|AAP34404.1| GalNAc-T5 [Homo sapiens] 570 gi|11385652|gb|AAG34907.1| CTCL tumor antigen se20-7 [Homo sapiens] 571 gi|77744395|gb|ABB02185.1| peroxiredoxin 6 [Homo sapiens] 572 gi|17380594|gb|AAL36149.1| smoothelin-B2 [Homo sapiens] 573 jgi|Xentr4|164841|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_109000059 574 jgi|Xentr4|165226|fgenesh1_pg.C_scaffold_114000050, 71% similar to emb|CAC08174.1| angiopoietin-2A [Gallus gallus] 575 gi|73985188|ref|XP_857134.1| PREDICTED: similar to sarcolemma associated protein isoform 4 576 gi|11878118|gb|AAG40812.1| junctin [Mus musculus] 577 gi|24307967|ref|NP_055665.1| SLIT-ROBO Rho GTPase activating protein 3 isoform a [Homo sapiens] 578 gi|7248381|dbj|BAA92711.1| adaptor protein p130Cas [Homo sapiens] 579 gi|40675370|gb|AAH64940.1| N-PAC protein [Homo sapiens] 580 gi|74737127|sp|Q6P1A2|OACT5_HUMAN Putative O-acyltransferase OACT5 581 gi|41393057|ref|NP_055742.2| connector enhancer of kinase suppressor of Ras 2 [Homo sapiens] 582 gi|27734148|ref|NP_775590.1| LanC lantibiotic synthetase component C-like 3 [Mus musculus] 583 gi|27881689|gb|AAH44640.1| SMP3 mannosyltransferase [Homo sapiens] 584 gi|109499190|ref|XP_001063503.1| PREDICTED: similar to Apoptosis-stimulating of p53 protein 2 585 gi|109461940|ref|XP_001080759.1| PREDICTED: similar to Ras interacting protein 1 586 gi|1588342|prf|2208351A syntrophin: ISOTYPE = alpha1 587 gi|54038724|gb|AAH84474.1| Cyclin F [Xenopus tropicalis] 588 gi|13543252|gb|AAH05792.1| Peroxisomal acyl-CoA thioesterase 1 [Mus musculus] 589 gi|50749873|ref|XP_421794.1| PREDICTED: similar to Sec23-interacting protein p125; phospholipase 590 gi|71896097|ref|NP_001025603.1| pgc protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 591 gi|8886495|gb|AAF80482.1| putative N-acetyltransferase Camello [Xenopus laevis] 592 gi|27696861|gb|AAH43767.1| Stam2-prov protein [Xenopus laevis] 593 gi|46358552|gb|AAS88585.1| schnurri 2 [Xenopus laevis] 594 gi|4557485|ref|NP_000087.1| ceruloplasmin (ferroxidase) [Homo sapiens] 595 gi|38505218|ref|NP_115545.3| putative acyl-CoA dehydrogenase [Homo sapiens] 596 gi|90819154|dbj|BAE92521.1| Scc2-1B [Xenopus laevis] 597 gi|3983139|gb|AAC83822.1| Scythe [Xenopus laevis] 598 gi|56118678|ref|NP_001008116.1| rhpn1 protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 599 gi|52352549|gb|AAU43764.1| Sprouty2 [Xenopus tropicalis] 600 gi|58332672|ref|NP_001011412.1| mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase 2 [Xenopus tropicalis] 601 gi|38649112|gb|AAH63224.1| Pck1-prov protein [Xenopus tropicalis] 602 gi|545505|gb|AAB29957.1| elongation factor 1 gamma; EF-1 gamma [Xenopus laevis] 603 gi|48762654|ref|NP_997769.2| cystathionase (cystathionine gamma-lyase) [Danio rerio] 604 gi|55665274|emb|CAH74062.1| microsomal glutathione S-transferase 3 [Homo sapiens] 605 gi|6755883|ref|NP_035771.1| transformation related protein 63 [Mus musculus] 606 gi|50750419|ref|XP_426573.1| PREDICTED: similar to Nonsyndromic hearing impairment protein[Gallus] 607 gi|55666106|emb|CAH71441.1| trimethyllysine hydroxylase, epsilon [Homo sapiens] 608 gi|75060494|sp|Q58DL1|ARGI2_BOVIN Arginase-2, mitochondrial precursor (Arginase II)[Bos taurus] 609 gi|56205790|emb|CAI23077.1| hydroxyacid oxidase 2 (long chain) [Homo sapiens] 610 gi|94421464|ref|NP_001035318.1| integrator complex subunit 8 [Gallus gallus] 611 gi|59850812|ref|NP_003352.2| uromodulin precursor [Homo sapiens] 612 gi|62089324|dbj|BAD93106.1| endoplasmic reticulum to nucleus signalling 1 isoform 1 613 gi|33416550|gb|AAH55929.1| Ccdc84 protein [Mus musculus] 614 gi|21260586|gb|AAM43806.1| MF-25 protein [Schistosoma japonicum] 615 gi|606867|gb|AAA70167.1| tumor suppressor 616 gi|89269945|emb|CAJ81266.1| sestrin 2 [Xenopus tropicalis] 617 gi|50758086|ref|XP_415754.1| PREDICTED: similar to Hydroxy-delta-5-steroid dehydrogenas3 beta- and steroid delta-isomerase 7 [Gallus gallus] 618 gi|6224683|gb|AAF05903.1| unconventional myosin-15 [Homo sapiens] 619 gi|12654737|gb|AAH01210.1| Phosphatidylserine synthase 2 [Homo sapiens] 620 gi|50752176|ref|XP_422690.1| PREDICTED: similar to enoyl-Coenzyme A, hydratase/3-hydroxyacylCoenzyme A dehydrogenase [Gallus gallus] 621 gi|50757123|ref|XP_415389.1| PREDICTED: similar to crumbs homolog 1 isoform II precursor, crumbs (Drosophila) homolog 1 [Gallus gallus] 622 gi|35193280|gb|AAH58635.1| PRUNEM1 [Mus musculus] 623 gi|73980816|ref|XP_854528.1| PREDICTED: similar to acyl-Coenzyme A oxidase-like [Canis familiaris] 624 gi|73976559|ref|XP_539499.2| PREDICTED: similar to Caspase recruitment domain protein 4 (Nod1protein) [Canis familiaris] 625 gi|54607096|ref|NP_006763.1| synaptic Ras GTPase activating protein 1 [Homo sapiens] 626 gi|55661632|emb|CAH70128.1| Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) 11 [Homo sapiens] 627 gi|73979757|ref|XP_848781.1| PREDICTED: similar to lipin 1 (predicted) isoform 3 [Canis familiaris] 628 gi|28933422|gb|AAO62630.1| transforming acidic coiled coil 2, long isoform [Homo sapiens] 629 gi|76645946|ref|XP_599459.2| PREDICTED: similar to Myosin-15 (Myosin XV) (Unconventional myosin-15)[Bos taurus] 630 gi|94966754|ref|NP_078856.4| elongation factor Tu GTP binding domain containing 1 isoform1 [Homo sapiens] 631 gi|461649|sp|Q05004|BB61_RABIT Brush border protein AdRab-A precursor 632 gi|74000067|ref|XP_544618.2| PREDICTED: similar to dispatched B [Canis familiaris] 633 gi|109019508|ref|XP_001093072.1| PREDICTED: similar to coagulation factor V precursor [Macaca 634 gi|55666623|ref|XP_520610.1| PREDICTED: similar to immunoglobulin heavy chain variable region [Pan troglodytes] 635 gi|61864227|ref|XP_589664.1| PREDICTED: similar to UDP-Gal:betaGlcNAc beta 1,3-galactosyltransferase 2 [Bos taurus] 636 gi|33115183|gb|AAH55286.1| A4GALT protein [Homo sapiens] 637 gi|73967675|ref|XP_859406.1| PREDICTED: similar to Bile-salt-activated lipase precursor (BAL) (Bile-salt-stimulated lipase) (BSSL) (Carboxyl ester lipase) 638 gi|68404557|ref|XP_706893.1| PREDICTED: similar to amiloride binding protein 1 isoform 2 [Danio rerio] 639 gi|51315372|dbj|BAD36782.1| carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1A [Equus caballus] 640 gi|76096366|ref|NP_694566.3| phospholipase B1 [Homo sapiens] 641 gi|68361264|ref|XP_693301.1| PREDICTED: similar to poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase family, member 10 [Danio rerio] 642 gi|55635247|ref|XP_508257.1| PREDICTED: ADP-ribosylation factor interacting protein 2 (arfaptin 2) [Pan troglodytes] 643 gi|86610887|gb|ABD14149.1| warm temperature acclimation-related 65 kDa protein [Xiphophorus hellerii] 644 gi|345591|pir||B46518 lg L1 chain V region V1 - African clawed frog (fragment) 645 gi|110596031|ref|ZP_01384352.1| lipoate-protein ligase B [Acidovorax sp. JS42] 646 gi|108868779|gb|EAT33004.1| ankyrin 2,3/unc44 [Aedes aegypti] 647 gi|110594901|ref|ZP_01383241.1| Pyridoxal-5′-phosphate-dependent enzyme, beta subunit [Acidovorax sp. JS42] 648 gi|55959887|emb|CAI13096.1| peroxiredoxin 1 [Homo sapiens] 649 gi|110595084|ref|ZP_01383422.1| adenylosuccinate synthetase [Acidovorax sp. JS42] 650 gi|73970103|ref|XP_538467.2| PREDICTED: similar to cyclin M4 [Canis familiaris] 651 gi|62205080|gb|AAH92627.1| Phytanoyl-CoA hydroxylase interacting protein [Rattus norvegicus] 652 gi|82408225|pdb|2C3E|A Chain A, The Bovine Mitochondrial Adp-Atp Carrier 653 gi|50732473|ref|XP_418652.1| PREDICTED: similar to ANKIB1 protein [Gallus gallus] 654 gi|109511875|ref|XP_001056775.1| PREDICTED: similar to kelch-like 15 [Rattus norvegicus] 655 gi|55741904|ref|NP_001006926.1| aminolevulinate, delta-, synthase 2 (sideroblastic/hypochromic 656 gi|73999418|ref|XP_535084.2| PREDICTED: similar to neutral sphingomyelinase (N-SMase) activation associated factor [Canis familiaris] 657 gi|32396220|gb|AAP43960.1| velo1 [Xenopus laevis] 658 gi|58332614|ref|NP_001011381.1| peroxisome biogenesis factor 5 [Xenopus tropicalis] 659 gi|22128593|gb|AAM23315.1| spindle checkpoint protein BubR1 [Xenopus laevis] 660 gi|31565526|gb|AAH53622.1| PTAR1 protein [Homo sapiens] 661 gi|73746712|gb|AAZ82269.1| prostate-specific transglutaminase 4 [Macaca mulatta] 662 gi|78191604|gb|ABB29997.1| FBP32 [Morone saxatilis] 663 gi|68246575|gb|EAN28671.1| Riboflavin biosynthesis protein RibD: Riboflavin-specific deaminase, C-terminal [Magnetococcus sp. MC-1] 664 gi|21595586|gb|AAH32308.1| Fucose-1-phosphate guanylyltransferase [Homo sapiens] 665 gi|10899879|ref|XP_001108622.1| PREDICTED: similar to loss of heterozygosity, 11, chromosomal region 2, gene A homolog [Macaca mulatta] 666 gi|17429005|emb|CAD15689.1| probable aspartate-semialdehyde dehydrogenase oxidoreductase protein [Ralstonia solanacearum] 667 gi|106892655|ref|ZP_01359818.1| 4-hydroxyphenylacetate 3-hydroxylase [Roseiflexus sp. RS-1] 668 gi|27381194|ref|NP_772723.1| putative hydrolase [Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110] 669 gi|62858233|ref|NP_001016915.1| glial cells missing homolog 1 [Xenopus tropicalis] 670 gi|62859601|ref|NP_001017010.1| amyotrophic lateral sclerosis 2 (juvenile) chromosome region, candidate 4 [Xenopus tropicalis] 671 gi|89268096|emb|CAJ82492.1| aldehyde dehydrogenase 16 family, member A1 [Xenopus tropicalis] 672 gi|89266842|emb|CAJ83859.1| amylase, alpha 1A; salivary [Xenopus tropicalis] 673 gi|76627826|ref|XP_580792.2| PREDICTED: similar to cell cycle progression 1 isoform 2 isoform 1 [Bos taurus] 674 gi|20521105|dbj|BAA32465.3| MEGF4 [Homo sapiens] 675 gi|46249844|gb|AAH68636.1| Unknown (protein for MGC: 79882) [Xeno 473 5e−132 676 gi|54673867|gb|AAH32447.2| WWC3 protein [Homo sapiens] 1070 0.0 677 gi|62740095|gb|AAH94096.1| Unknown (protein for IMAGE: 6643242) [1308 0.0 678 gi|54311233|gb|AAH84803.1| LOC495341 protein [Xenopus laevis] 1456 0.0 679 gi|63146279|gb|AAH95927.1| Unknown (protein for IMAGE: 7018578) [638 0.0 680 jgi|Xentr4|459313|estExt_fgenesh1_pg.C_6330012, ˜30% similar to FC IgG binding protein. Has five VWD and four trypsin-like cystein rich domains 681 jgi|Xentr4|459314|estExt_fgenesh1_pg.C_6330013, ˜30% similar to FC IgG binding protein. Has 6 and half VWD and 6 trypsin-like cystein rich domains 682 gi|51895818|gb|AAH81099.1| MGC83295 protein [Xenopus laevis] 3666 0.0 683 jgi|Xentr4|461419|estExt_fgenesh1_pg.C_12590003, ˜30% similar in the kinase domain to protein kinase theta of human 684 gi|54035200|gb|AAH84073.1| LOC494989 protein [Xenopus laevis] 

1. A composition comprising an isolated mitotic spindle matrix capable of mediating mitotic spindle assembly and/or nucleating microtubule assembly and organization in vivo and in vitro, comprising a membrane-lamin-based assemblage containing one or more proteins and/or nucleic acids essential for a cell division and differentiation signaling pathway.
 2. A method for identifying an agent that modulates a cell division and/or differentiation signaling pathway comprising: (a) contacting a plurality of beads or dots each of said plurality of beads or dots comprising at least one protein with a biological sample in the presence or absence of said agent; (b) determining the effect on spindle formation, MT nucleation, or lamin-membrane matrix assembly wherein the change in spindle formation, MT nucleation or lamin-membrane matrix assembly compared to a control indicates an agent capable of modulating a cell division and/or differentiation signaling pathway.
 3. The method of claim 2, wherein the cell division and/or differentiation signaling pathway is selected from the group consisting of a GTPase protein signaling pathway, a kinase signaling pathway, an ubiquitin signaling pathway, an apoptosis and capsase signaling pathway.
 4. The method of claim 3, wherein the GTPase protein is selected from the group consisting of Ran, Rab, Ras, Rho, Cdc, and Rac.
 5. The method of claim 3, wherein the kinase signaling pathway comprises a kinase protein is selected from the group consisting of Aurora A and B.
 6. The method of claim 2, wherein the biological sample is a cell lysate or extract.
 7. The method of claim 6, wherein the cells are HeLa cells, NIH3T3 cells or embryonic stem cells.
 8. The method of claim 6, wherein the cell extract is Xenopus egg extracts.
 9. The method of claim 2, wherein said beads or dots comprise agents which bind to the protein.
 10. The method of claim 9, wherein said protein is a wild-type protein.
 11. The method of claim 10, wherein said wild-type protein is Aurora A.
 12. The method of claim 2, wherein the control is a negative control.
 13. The method of claim 12, wherein the negative control does not comprise the agent.
 14. The method of claim 12, wherein the negative control comprises a mutant protein.
 15. The method of claim 14, wherein the mutant protein comprises one or more amino acid substitutions or deletions.
 16. The method of claim 2, wherein the control is a positive control.
 17. The method of claim 16, wherein the positive control comprises an inhibitor of MT nucleation, spindle formation or lamin formation.
 18. The method of claim 2 further comprising determining the effect of the agent on post-translational modification of one or more proteins.
 19. The method of claim 2 further comprising determining the effect of the agent on translation of one or more proteins.
 20. The method of claim 2 further comprising determining the interaction of a lamin B matrix with a cellular component selected from the group consisting of: one or more RNA molecules, transcription factors, mitochondria, and membrane components.
 21. The method of claim 2, wherein said agent is selected from the group consisting of a protein, chemical compound, an antibody, a ribozyme, a nucleic acid, a polypeptide, an antisense nucleic acid molecule, and an interfering RNA (RNAi) molecule.
 22. The method of claim 2, wherein said protein is selected from the group consisting of Spindle Assembly Factors, filament proteins, and kinesins.
 23. The method of claim 2, wherein said beads are magnetic beads.
 24. The method of claim 2, wherein said dots are quantum dots.
 25. An agent identified by the method of claim
 2. 26. A method of treating a proliferative or aging disease in a subject in need of such treatment comprising administering a therapeutically effective amount of a pharmaceutical composition comprising the identified agent in claim
 25. 27. The method of claim 26, wherein said proliferative disease is selected from the group consisting of cancer and blood vessel proliferative disorders.
 28. The method of 27, wherein said cancer is selected from the group consisting of squamous cell carcinoma, astrocytoma, Kaposi's sarcoma, glioblastoma, multiple myeloma, lung cancer, bladder cancer, head and neck cancer, melanoma, ovarian cancer, prostate cancer, breast cancer, small-cell lung cancer, glioma, colorectal cancer, genitourinary cancer, gastrointestinal cancer.
 29. The method of claim 27, wherein said blood vessel proliferative disorder is selected from the group consisting of diabetic retinopathy, age-related macular degeneration, retinopathy of prematurity, arthritis and restenosis.
 30. The method of claim 26, wherein the aging disease is laminopathy or progeria.
 31. A kit for identifying an agent that modulates spindle formation, microtubule (MT) nucleation or lamin assembly comprising a plurality of beads or dots, each of said plurality of beads or dots comprising a protein involved in a cell division and/or differentiation and signaling pathway, and at least one antibody to said protein.
 32. The kit of claim 31, wherein said beads are selected from the group consisting of porous beads, nonporous beads and magnetic beads.
 33. The kit of claim 31, wherein said dots are quantum dots. 